Rhino review – horribly compelling Ukrainian crime drama

Oleh Sentsov’s deftly directed morality tale charts the rise and fall of an out-of-control gangster

The Ukrainian director Oleh Sentsov famously doesn’t pull his punches. Previously sentenced to 20 years in prison by Moscow – the charge was terrorism, his crime was speaking out against the Russian annexation of Crimea – he was released in a prisoner swap and went on to make films that are every bit as muscular and confrontational as his political presence.

The latest, Rhino, is a morality tale that unfolds in a 90s Ukrainian underworld full of bullet-headed hard men intent on creating chaos and division. But even among the other gangsters, Vora (Serhii Filimonov), an unstoppable force nicknamed Rhino, is regarded with a degree of trepidation. Described as “a piece of shit with no brakes” by a rival boss, he ploughs through his enemies like an out-of-control threshing machine. He’s not, it has to be said, a particularly interesting or nuanced character. But Sentsov’s deft direction – in particular a bravura single-shot, early-life montage – makes this gory rise and fall story a horribly compelling watch.

  • On digital platforms from 16 May

Watch a trailer for Rhino.

Contributor

Wendy Ide

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Inversion review – compelling Iranian drama
Family and duty come into conflict in Behnam Behzadi’s tale of a woman torn

Simran Hans

21, May, 2017 @7:00 AM

Article image
Pamfir review – gripping Ukrainian crime thriller
A reformed smuggler takes one last trip across the Romanian border in Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk’s bold debut

Wendy Ide

07, May, 2023 @11:00 AM

Article image
Saint Omer review – Alice Diop’s compelling courtroom drama
The French director draws on her own experience in this story of a writer sitting in on the trial of a woman accused of murdering her own baby

Wendy Ide

04, Feb, 2023 @3:00 PM

Article image
Gangubai Kathiawadi review – gutsy Indian true crime drama
The hard-hitting story of a sex worker who rises through the ranks of 60s gangland Mumbai is powered by a magnetic performance from Alia Bhatt

Wendy Ide

27, Feb, 2022 @11:30 AM

Article image
1976 review – compelling drama of privilege and dissent in Pinochet’s Chile
Aline Küppenheim excels as a bourgeois housewife whose eyes are opened to the true cost of life in a military dictatorship

Wendy Ide

26, Mar, 2023 @11:00 AM

Article image
From Afar review – compelling film-making
Venezuela’s Lorenzo Vigas succeeds through ‘show’ rather than ‘tell’ as subtle body language reveals an uneasy fascination between a mismatched couple

Wendy Ide

03, Jul, 2016 @7:00 AM

Article image
Bad Tales review – horribly compelling urban fairytale
A sultry Roman backwater provides the oppressive setting for this story of three disaffected families from the D’Innocenzo brothers

Wendy Ide

20, Feb, 2021 @3:00 PM

Article image
Krisha review – compelling family drama
Trey Edward Shults cast his own relatives in a story based on their own family – the result is intense and complex

Wendy Ide

11, Dec, 2016 @8:00 AM

Article image
Mon Roi review – histrionic French drama
A portrait of a destructive relationship is burdened by a redundant subplot

Wendy Ide

29, May, 2016 @7:00 AM

Article image
Sunset review – murky Hungarian drama
A young woman seeks her way in pre-first world war Budapest

Simran Hans

01, Jun, 2019 @2:00 PM