Movie: The Imposter

Frédéric Bourdin- the French serial impostor the press has nicknamed "The Chameleon"
Frédéric Bourdin- the French serial impostor the press has nicknamed “The Chameleon”. Image supplied

Movie Preview by Rodger Gallagher
This unique  film walks  the razor’s edge  between  true-crime  documentary  and  stylish  noir  mystery covering the exploits of Frédéric Bourdin- the French serial impostor nicknamed “The Chameleon”. A classic mystery  revolving  around  crime,  family,  deceit  and  the slippery   nature   of   truth, the difference here is that it all really   happened. That is why this riveting story inspired British filmmaker Bart Layton to push this non-fiction  film  into  fresh  territory, fusing  the  investigative  spirit  of  a documentary   with   the   breakneck   pacing   and   atmosphere   of   a   psychological   thriller. The film hooks you with   its twists,  turns  and  tantalizing  questions  of  who  to  believe  .  .  .  and  why. And this is no doubt why it won the grand jury prize at last year’s Miami Film Festival and was a favourite in the 2012 New Zealand Film Festival.

“The creepy pleasure is all in the getting there. This film is the summer’s wickedest thrill.” Auckland Herald 5/5

The  tale  begins  with  an  unsettling  disappearance, that  of  Nicholas  Barclay,  a  13  year-old  boy  from Texas who  vanishes  without  a  trace. Three  and  a  half  years  later,  staggering  news  arrives: the  boy  has been  found,  thousands  of  miles  from  home  in  Spain,  saying  he  survived  a  mind-boggling  ordeal  of  kidnap  and torture  by  shadowy  captors. His  family  is  ecstatic  to  have  him  back  no  matter  how  strange  the  circumstances but  things  become  far  stranger  once  he  returns  to  Texas.

Though  the  family  accepts  him,  suspicion  surrounds  the  person  who  claims  to  be  Nicholas.  How  could the  Barclay’s  blonde,  blue-eyed  son  have  returned  with  darker  skin  and  eyes?  How  could  his  personality  and even  accent  have  changed  so  profoundly? And  if  this  person  who  has  arrived  in  Texas  isn’t  the  Barclay’s  missing  child  .  .  .  who  on  earth  is  he?    And  what really  happened  to  Nicholas?

The Imposter (M) on at the Old School, Stewart St, Saturday 16 February 8pm and Sunday 17 February 4.30pm

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