At ninety minutes, You were never really there is probably British filmmaker Lynn Ramsay's most accessible movie. Since the narrative is formulaic, the viewer isn't too disoriented by the shock cuts and unresolved scenes -- you fill in what is missing from your understanding of the genre and its conventions. Ramsay gestures at those conventions enough to keep the film, more or less, on track, although it's pretty evident that she has, on some level, contempt for the material. A traumatized Iraq war veteran -- is there any other kind in the movies -- is paid to rescue a senator's daughter who has been trafficked into some kind of elite pedophile brothel. Joe, the vet, fulfills the contract, thereby, inadvertently, discovering a wider and more sinister conspiracy that involves the governor of the State. A bunch of bad guys get killed and the vet, who fantasizes about committing suicide, survives the bloodbath along with the girl, Nina. That's it -- there's nothing more in the movie and most of the plot points that I have recounted are established very elliptically. The film is highly derivative: the creepy milieu of wealthy perverts is reminiscent of certain aspects of Eyes Wide Shut. The plot seems based on Scorsese's Taxi Driver, although the movie is much more primitive than the Scorsese picture: Travis Bickel in Taxi Driver is mentally ill and, at least, some of the conspiratorial aspects of that movie are halllucinated; Joe, in Ramsay's film, is severely damaged by PTSD but he's not crazy and the ring of pedophiles that he uncovers, a febrile conceit of far Right conspiracy theorists, is apparently intended to be real. Parts of the movie play as variations on themes established by the Epstein files, although this movie was made before that scandal became widely notorious. A scene in which the mercenary marches away from a pond in which he has just deposited the corpse of his mother emphasizes the percussive sound of Joe's feet on the lakeside trail -- this scene duplicates John Boorman's Point Blank image of Lee Marvin hustling through an airport with the sound of his heels on the tile floor amplified.
We meet Joe in the aftermath of one of his rescue missions. He's mimicking suicide with a plastic bag wrapped over his face. There's blood on his tools, including a ball-peen hammer that he has wrapped in a rag. Leaving the hotel, he throws away his equipment and is then attacked by someone -- we don't know who this is. He head butts the guy and knocks him out. Back at home in New York City, Joe tends to his elderly mother. She's been watching horror films and is scared. Joe mimics one of the knife scenes in Psycho, gesturing at his mother as if he's going to stab her death while making the high-pitched squealing sound from the Psycho score. They play some kind of game. Joe's mother is already a mummified corpse, haggard and emaciated with startlingly white skin. The next day Joe goes to see a contact, Angel, in his bodega. Money is exchanged. A young man sees Joe come into the store and this alarms the mercenary. He cuts off contacts with Angel and the bodega and, then, goes to see McCleary, a weary middle-aged man who is his handler. McCleary sets up Joe with a new job: $50,000 for retrieving a teenage girl from sex traffickers -- the girl is the daughter of a smarmy senator named Votto. (Votto, in turn, is an acolyte to an even more smarmy pol, Governor Wilkins whom he is assisting in an election campaign.) Joe has no trouble infiltrating a sort of pedophile brothel in a townhouse, beating down the guards with his ball-peen hammer. He extracts the girl, an angelic child named Nina, and takes her to the fleabag hotel where her father is supposed to retrieve her. At the hotel, Joe and the girl see that someone has thrown Votto off the top of a skyscraper. There's a knock at the door: someone from Votto's office but this guy is immediately killed by crooked cops who fight with Joe (he kills one of them) and abduct the girl again. Joe finds that McClearly has been murdered and finds his mother under a pillow pierced by a shot that has also pierced her eye. Joe wraps his mother in plastic and takes her to a rural pond where he weights the body with stones and drops it into the deep water (the lake seems to be implausibly abysmal). Joe, then, tries to commit suicide again by drowning himself but changes his mind. He gets in his car, tracks the governor for whom Votto was campaigning to a huge mansion, a bit like the estate in the Kubrick movie. Entering the mansion, he kills the guards, makes his way to the Governor's playroom and finds the man dead on the floor with his throat slit. Downstairs in the dining room, Nina is eating her lunch with a straight razor covered in blood at the table. Joe and Nina go to a local diner where Joe fantasizes about shooting himself in the head. But he doesn't kill himself. Nina, who has really spoken up to this point, says that "it's a beautiful day." Joe agrees.
Joe's mind is a rat's nest filled with all sorts of hideous memories. All the usual suspects are there: an abusive and demanding father, domestic assault on Joe's mother, and lots of ghastly memories of bad stuff happening in Iraq: at one point, Joe recalls giving an Iraqi girl a candy bar only to see the girl killed by another kid for the candy. These memories invade the film by way of intrusive, jump-cut flashbacks. There's some kind of fetish about counting: both Joe and Nina count backwards to themselves, perhaps, to soothe their troubled minds -- this counting establishes a bond between Joe and Nina, both victims of severe abuse. Joe, played hysterically by Joaquin Phoenix, spends most of the film sobbing and toying with the idea of self-harm and suicide. The suicide fantasies erupt into the film in a jarring explosive fashion. Despite its extremely conventional plot, the movie's imagery is surprising. We frequently don't know exactly what we are seeing -- there's a lag between what we see and what we later understand to be the case. A good example is a scene in which Joe is transporting his mother's corpse out of town for interment in the pond. He has wrapped the body in plastic. While driving Joe opens the window. We hear a rustling sound and, then, the film cuts to the plastic covering the head of the body seeming to move -- is the old lady alive? No, it's just the wind disturbing the plastic in which she is wrapped. The movie never really explains Joe's backstory. We're never shown what has really traumatized him to the point of becoming a catatonic, embittered survivor. This is all left to our imagination. The film is gripping, fast-paced, and, mostly, opaque. I admire the technique but I've seen this stuff all before in better movies. There isn't a moment in this film, which feels very advanced and adventurous in its mise-en-scene, that isn't essentially a rip-off of some other movie and the nod to right-wing conspiracy theories is, I suppose, faintly offensive.