Brisbane 2011 Review: Jon Hewitt's X
Opening with a titillating full-frontal act of fornication in front of a group of champagne guzzling, celery-stick chomping upper-class lady types, X seemingly prepares you for the ensuing unflinching proceedings that lay ahead.
rating: 3.5
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Opening with a titillating full-frontal act of fornication in front of a group of champagne guzzling, celery-stick chomping upper-class lady types, X seemingly prepares you for the ensuing unflinching proceedings that lay ahead. But contrary to the beautifully blunt title this is no exposé of the seedy underworld of Sydney's red light district - director Jon Hewitt is more interested in setting up some suspenseful surprises that give this film more of a instinctual killer thriller narrative thrust. Not that we should be surprised. Hewitt is a film-maker infamous in Oz for smart serial killer thrillers like Redball and Acolytes and the sexually tinged Darklovestory. But before that there was his audacious Melbourne-set vampire killing, all-screwing and drug-taking 1992 debut Bloodlust. So there were always sordid hints in this film-maker's make-up. The narrative for his latest follows the final exploits of 30-year old upper-class call girl Holly (Viva Bianca) who, prior to swapping the sleazy Sydney confines of The Cross for the cultural classy highs of Paris, plucks 17-year-old first-timer Shay (Hanna Mangan Lawrence) fresh from the streets to accompany her for a final high-paying threesome. But events take a sordid turn for the worse when the two unwittingly become witnesses to a murder with the perpetrator (an unhinged Stephen Phillips) hot on their tale.