What’s the greater act of love: reporting your 14-year-old daughter who’s just confessed to murdering her best friend to the police, or covering up the crime so she can lead the most normal life possible thereafter? The answer seems obvious, which is how divorced parents Paul (Mehdi Nebbou) and Christine (Ulrike C. Tscharre) end up accusing the dead girl’s alcoholic father (Ronald Kukulies) of being responsible for her disappearance.
Love can make people do terrible things — a point the German drama We Monsters illustrates over and over again. Compulsively watchable if frustratingly one-note (well, two-note), Sebastian Ko’s sophomore film skillfully maintains its difficult balance between moralizing and empathy. During its worst moments, it makes tragedy feel like a dare. How far can we punish these characters before it doesn’t make narrative sense anymore? And yet, Paul and Christine’s actions as the parents of teenage Sarah (Janina Fautz) are all wholly understandable — which roots their increasingly desperate acts of violence in recognizable motivations and thought processes. Each decision feels like the right one — and each one pushes them closer to mayhem and chaos.

In the days after her friend’s death, Sarah displays so little grief or regret that even Paul and Christine are forced to second-guess themselves — their daughter might be a psychopath, after all. But Sarah turns out to be something potentially far more dangerous: a clueless teen. It’s quickly revealed that the story Sarah’s told her parents about what happened to her friend Charlie (Marie Bendig) isn’t quite the truth, but an act of vengeance against her rock-star dad for putting his career before her. What’s heartbreaking, of course, is that Sarah’s too young to realize what it means that her parents now believe her capable of killing her closest friend.
Happily divorced and both newly paired off, Paul and Christine are forced to work together to keep their only daughter out of prison while attempting – and failing – to keep their layers of mutual resentments from complicating their situation further. (Sarah’s delight that her parents are spending a lot more time together is soon followed by an agonizing sex scene that perfectly exemplifies why the duo were wise to separate.) Every time Paul and Christine think they can finally lay their problems to rest, Charlie’s angry, increasingly intoxicated father reappears, demanding to speak with Sarah, especially once he spots his daughter’s backpack at Christine’s place of business.
Despite a glaring plot hole or two, the script boasts ingenuity to spare. Stark as the film is by design — with some showy camera work and off-kilter compositions that add visual interest — it’s full of rich character details, like Paul’s tattoo of Princess Jasmine riding a magic carpet — a telltale sign of both his adoration for his daughter and of a history of poor decision-making. As promised, the film ends with monstrosity, but the utterly familiar kind. To their absolute horror, Paul and Christine discover that the gall — and the pained bawl — are coming from inside the house.
Images via Ester.Reglin.Film Produktionsgesellschaft
The Best of TIFF 2015 | Exclusive Reviews, Interviews and Videos
The Best of TIFF 2015: Exclusive Reviews, Interviews and Videos
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'The Martian' Sciences All The Science
Matt Damon stars in an outer space thriller by nerds, for nerds. The rest of us can enjoy it too.
Image via 20th Century Fox
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Brian Helgeland on ‘Legend’ and ‘The Wild Bunch’
The Oscar-winning filmmaker reveals which Tom Hardy was hardest to work within a film that stars two of them.
Image via Universal Pictures
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'High-Rise' is an Impressive Erection
An insulated community gradually collapses into anarchy and horror in Ben Wheatley’s slimy J.G. Ballard adaptation.
Image via Recorded Picture Company
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Denis Villeneuve on 'Sicario' and 'Blade Runner 2'
The filmmaker promises to 'take care of' the mystery of whether Deckard is a replicant or a human in his next film, the long-awaited follow-up to Blade Runner.
Image via CraveOnline
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'The Boy and the Beast' is Best of the Fest
Mamoru Hosoda’s unique and brilliant animated fantasy could very well fill a hole in your soul.
Image via Mongrel Media
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Chiwetel Ejiofor on ‘The Martian’
He can about playing a super nerd, but he cannot talk about playing a supervillain (yet).
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Tom Hardy is Kray-Kray in 'Legend'
Tom Hardy plays identical twin organized crime bosses, but only one of them well, in Brian Helgeland’s uneven biopic.
Image via Universal Pictures
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'The Danish Girl' Flakes at the End
Eddie Redmayne and Alicia Vikander give soaring performances, but this Oscar contender lands with an unexpected thud.
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'Mustang' Isn't Just Turkey's 'Virgin Suicides'
A promising new filmmaker explores the repressions five sisters undergo when they’re accused of sexual indecency.
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Drew Goddard on 'The Martian' and 'Sinister Six'
"It was the epic Spider-Man movie of my dreams," says the acclaimed writer/director.
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'Body' Makes You Laugh Without Knowing Why
Corporeality haunts three characters in this masterful Silver Bear winner from director Małgorzata Szumowska.
Image via Nowhere
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'Green Room' Has Strong Fear on Tap
Jeremy Saulnier's neo-Nazi thriller is a worthy follow-up to Blue Ruin.
Image via A24
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Superb Satire in 'Chevalier'
The Greek New Wave demands to be viewed with this comedy about hyper-competitiveness turning men into horse's asses.
Image via Faliro House Productions
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'Sicario' Borders on Greatness
From the director of Prisoners comes a gripping episode of narcs and violations.
Image via Lionsgate