You may recall hearing about this story in the news at the
time. In 2004 a prank caller rang up a fast food restaurant and, claiming to be
a cop, had the manager bring an employee, a young woman, into the office and
hold her there. The caller led the manager through all kinds of degrading
actions, including a strip search of this innocent employee, before the
deception crumbled. That’s true. Those are the basic facts. Writer-director Craig Zobel’s Compliance is a tough, harrowing film
that expertly recounts these events in terrifyingly convincing ordinary detail.
The film starts with big white letters filling the screen informing the
audience of the story’s veracity. Even so, it’s hard to believe, not because
the events within are so implausible, but because you don’t want to believe.
This is undoubtedly one of the most harrowing films of the
year, a constant uncomfortable escalation of tension and dread that plays like
a tightening vise. What makes it so intense is how Zobel easily draws us into
the realism of the situation. The production design feels so specifically
worn-down and ordinary. The greasy yellow uniforms of the employees, the
weathered signage littering the kitchen and halls, and the slimy tiles of the
backroom ooze with the feeling of commonplace, everyday accoutrements of a
minimum-wage customer service job. As the work day begins, the manager (Ann
Dowd), a middle-aged woman who struggles to connect with her younger employees,
is stressed out by nothing more than looming corporate anger because of an
unknown shift worker’s mishandling of the freezer. It’s an ordinary day in an
ordinary place.
At the height of the evening rush the phone call comes. The
voice on the other end (Pat Healy) introduces himself as Officer Daniels and
says that he has a woman in his office complaining that an employee at the
restaurant stole money from her purse. The suspect is blonde, he says. “Becky?”
replies the manager. “That’s right,” the voice says. It’s a scene of rapidly
accumulating unease. The manager’s clearly making a mistake, falling right into
his trap that plays out across the screen in much the same way Dorothy is
bamboozled by the phony wizard in the sepia tone Kansas of The Wizard of Oz. But the consequences here are far more dangerous.
It’s easy to see how easily the manager falls for it. She’s
harried, busy, preoccupied. Once she misses the initial warning signs, once
she’s unknowingly taking part in the caller’s deception, it’s harder to back
out even as the situation escalates. Becky (Dreama Walker) is brought into the
manager’s office and the search begins. First, her purse and phone are taken
away and scrutinized at the caller’s request. Then, she turns out her pockets.
Then she disrobes. At each escalation, there are hesitations and negotiations
between the women and the supposed policeman on the other end of the line. What
makes the film so edge-of-the-seat suspenseful is not necessarily that the
ending is in doubt – although “how bad will it get?” is certainly an urgent
pins-and-needles question – but because the behavior every step of the way is
at once believable and inscrutable.
This is a film that has no time for a wide shot. After the
film’s opening establishing shots, Zobel and cinematographer Adam Stone hold
the camera close. The central horror unfolds in tight medium shots and
close-ups, trapping the audience in a position to study the emotions on the
actors’ faces. Dowd and Walker have moments where their heads fill the frame
and we see doubt, pain, and pleading confusion twitch in their muscles. Zobel
observes each and every squirm in ways that faintly recall nothing less than
the powerful close-ups of Carl Theodor Dreyer’s The Passion of Joan of Arc. This approach to the material wouldn’t
work if the performances weren’t so great and precise. Dowd’s painful, and
painfully understandable, initial lapse of judgment is bad enough, but the
continual creepy descent into powerlessness that Walker goes through, a wringer
of humiliations and degradations, is almost physically difficult to watch.
Together, these two actresses navigate these scenes with
sharp emotional reflexes. Dowd’s performance grows creepy at times as we watch
the growing extent to which she’ll ignore doubt about the situation to
penetrate the buzz of regular restaurant duties in her busy mind. But what’s
truly terrifying and sorrowful is how completely she allows herself to believe
the voice on the phone, even feeling a sense of pride when he congratulates her
on all her help. Walker’s performance is just as stunning, a fearlessly
emotionally naked performance. Her bright-eyed employee feels so immediately
real in her first scenes that by the time she’s held captive by her own boss,
it’s no wonder it becomes unbearable to watch. All the while, there’s the buzz
of Healy’s voice over the phone. It’s a slippery performance, a work of convincing
matter-of-fact sadism, that is spiky and deeply upsetting. Zobel forces the
audience to sit uncomfortably with these characters held hostage, played with a
sick puppeteer’s skill by nothing more than a thoroughly normal-sounding voice
on the other end of the phone. It’s this immediacy that makes the film so
powerful an exploration. This is a film that regards the behavior of its
characters with precision, refusing to explicitly explain and rarely looking away.
It is an instant legend that many in the audience for the
Sundance premiere of Compliance walked
out and that a question and answer session afterwards was contentious. I saw
the film just a couple of weeks ago in a festival setting and the screening shed
nearly a fourth of the audience by the time it was over. This is a film that
gets up under the skin with deeply upsetting subject matter, but I don’t think
that’s what upsets some so. The visceral discomfort comes not from exploitation
of the true story or of the actresses involved, but from the film’s deeply felt
empathy with the characters and the situation. That’s not to say Zobel lets any
character escape the full implications of their actions, but that he allows the
characters to be who they are without cheap demonization. It’s all too easy to
sit in a comfortable seat in the dark and scoff at the screen. What’s far more
difficult is to watch a terrible situation enacted on the screen and come to
think about it seriously in an attempt to arrive at some kind of understanding.
Why did the caller do what he did? We may never know and the
film provides no answers. Similarly, there are no easy answers to the behavior
of the manager and those she ropes in to help her carry out the caller’s
orders, just as it’s not easy to watch an energetic young woman slowly lose
power over herself and her situation. But what Zobel provides is a chance to
view sensational material from a sober, clinical viewpoint. It’s not easy, but
it’s a strong effort, a simple provocation and a work of powerful filmmaking.
Really looking forward to this one, Healy was great in The Innkeepers
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