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Streaming Shuffle

Citizen X

Citizens moving through time.

Like Zodiac and Memories of Murder, Citizen X uses a country’s real-life serial killer case to examine the weight of spending years and years focused on a single horrible question.

Unlike those movies, Citizen X had an answer to its decade-plus riddle by the time it was made, which may be why it got made first: it comes with that handy (and marketable) sense of resolution. Indeed, this is a more conventional piece than its fellows. That partly comes with its format—it’s a made-for-HBO movie—but it also comes from its sensibilities and execution.

For a serial killer film, it’s … almost comfort viewing? It involves disturbing acts—not only the murders Andrei Chikatilo (Jeffrey DeMunn) commits but the way the Soviet Union buries these “decadent” and “Western” crimes under official silence and cruel, petty power plays—but it’s rarely disturbing in form. There’s a distance here, inviting the audience’s contemplation rather than its direct experience. Part of that is avoiding extremes: our main investigator, weary forensic specialist Viktor Burakov (Stephen Rea), is bowed down by all his draining years of searching, but the wear-and-tear he goes through, while affecting, isn’t as major as Paul Avery’s out-of-control drinking problem or Seo Tae-yoon’s loss of faith in empirical proof.

Citizen X plays softly, coaxing intimate but rewarding moments from its actors rather than going big, and, knowing what approach it’s taking, it correctly adjusts its core conflict to suit its mood. (The alternative is that it’s fitting its concerns to its real-life subject matter: the work stalling for years because of bad science means a chunk of this is out of our characters’ control. They can’t meaningfully act on a major scale, so we have to observe them on a smaller one.) This isn’t Burakov vs. Chikatilo, not man vs. man or man vs. evil. It’s man vs. bureaucracy, and that means everything that highlights Burakov’s humanity and individualism is conflict-relevant. That’s why this is almost as much about the bond he forms with his more politically savvy commanding officer, Fetisov (Donald Sutherland), as it is about his long hunt for a killer. It’s half-Zodiac, half-Chernobyl.

It doesn’t have the budget or the scope of any of these comparison points, but it manages to feel like a decent portrait of years passing by all the same. That includes milestones both political—glasnost—and personal: one of the most affecting moments comes when Fetisov finds out years too late that it would’ve been standard procedure at the FBI to rotate Burakov off the case every so often, to give him much-needed rest. Fetisov did what he could, what he knew to fight for, but he didn’t know to fight for that.

Sutherland plays him as crumbling a little as he tries to explain it all to Burakov. His honor won’t permit him to hide from his friend (and his responsibility) that he was too self-conscious with the FBI to admit the truth: “I … pretended that I had known that all along.” Sutherland’s stammer there is beautifully observed.

Sutherland and Rea are the core of the film (“Together you make a wonderful person,” another character tells them), and watching trust and regard develop between them is one of the draws here. But they’re also well-supported by DeMunn and a scene-stealing Max von Sydow, who plays a psychiatrist who provides invaluable assistance to the investigation—once Burakov and Fetisov are allowed to utilize him. DeMunn is stuck with the showiest but also most standard role. He does good work as Chikatilo, but this kind of superficially mild-mannered, guilty, harried serial killer is more familiar than the movie’s other figures.

I suspect writer-director Chris Gerolmo could have pushed Chikatilo to be a little bit more memorable if that had been the part of the story he was most interested in, but again, he’s more attuned to the struggling but well-intentioned characters and to the forces pushing down on them. That’s a rare and interesting angle for a film to take … which means that by writing about how this film is more conventional than its peers, I’ve talked myself around to believing that it’s a pleasantly odd duck in its own right. I’m fond of it.

Citizen X is streaming on HBO Max.