Directed by Chris Gerolmo; produced by Timothy Marx
In the mid-1980s, two police officers, Lieutenant Viktor Burakov (Stephen Rea) and Colonel Mikhail Fetisov (Donald Sutherland), in the southern Russian city of Rostov, realise that they had a serial killer murdering people, most of them young. As evidence builds of the extent of the crime spree, the pair face increasing obstacles trying to end the killing and bring the man responsible to justice.
Citizen X is an interesting and, in some ways, a fascinating movie, more than it is an excellent movie, It certainly has quality, particularly in the performances of Sutherland and Max von Sydow, but other aspects of the actual film-making are ordinary. The director, who also adapted the book (The Killer Department) about the subject, wrote Mississippi Burning. Gerolmo is, perhaps, a better writer than director, though he doesn’t stand out in either field in Citizen X.
The story itself is the main attraction, I think, depicting, with some fictionalisation, the hunt for Andrei Chikatilo (Jeffrey DeMunn), the first acknowledged serial killer in the Soviet Union. The progress the movie follows is less police procedural than political drama: the hurdles that the police must overcome are principally those of bureaucracy and entrenched ideology.
There was no precedent in the Soviet Union for an investigation such as that which Burakov begins; the very notion that there might be a serial killer in the country is dismissed by local Communist Party chiefs: such a phenomenon occurs only in capitalist nations. To admit to such a creature existing in the USSR is to admit something is wrong with the country and its system. Burakov stumbles along in his work, driven more by passion than expertise; he has no model to follow, no textbook. This takes an immense emotional toll on him.
Part of the problem is shown to be the politics involved in every aspect of a totalitarian state. This is epitomised by Fetisov, whom Sutherland makes the most interesting character in the film. At first, he is a cynical, sardonic man, more a smooth dealer and broker of favours than a policeman; he’s spent his adult life negotiating the best bargains he can get from friends, rivals and superiors, and is amused, more than anything else, by Burakov’s earnestness. Gradually, he begins to take a real interest in the investigation, and his method of championing Burakov may not be to the latter’s liking, but is effective. Fetisov’s change, as he re-orients his way of working, without altering them all together, is intriguing.
As dedicated as everyone on the detective team becomes, it is the changes wrought by glasnost that influence the case the most. The abruptness of these changes comes almost over-night in the movie and, while this may not reflect events in real life, it may: life in the Soviet Union, where little was what it seemed or was claimed, and much hidden, was, in some ways, quite close to life in George Orwell’s Oceania.
While the writing and direction is adequate, and the cast most capable (it includes veterans such as Joss Ackland, Imelda Staunton, John Wood, and Max von Sydow as a psychiatrist who’s quietly excited to do his part), it is the setting - the time and place - that will hold the interest of anyone watching Citizen X.