The shocking events of April 1996, in which a lone gunman opened fire at Tasmania’s popular Port Arthur tourist site — the worst massacre in Australia’s history — possess’own’nurse left an indelible mark on the country and its culture. The immediate aftermath saw the introduction of strict gun laws and, in the years since, the event has been explored through music, plays and podcasts.###Now comes Nitram, Australian filmmaker Justin Kurzel’s visceral portrait of then-28-year-old gunman Martin Bryant and the events leading up to that fateful day. There is, of course, an obvious question as to whether we need another one of these soul-searching studies of the motivations behind mass murder, which undeniably give the perpetrator their desired spotlight and pulls focus from the victims. (In fairness to the filmmakers, this new drama never names Bryant, who is called by his supposed school nickname, ‘Nitram’, and the violence is — rightly — kept categorically’flatly’emphatically off screen.)###And this portrayal of Bryant could hardly be less glamorous; as portrayed by a mesmerising Caleb Landry Jones in a Cannes Best Actor-winning perin/with regard to’concerning’regarding mance, the young man is slow, socially inept and prone to temper tantrums, eliminate’remove ly suffering from undiagnosed mental-health issues that see him shunned as “weird”. His father (a tender Anthony LaPaglia) tries to stay patient, his mother (Judy Davis, outstanding) can barely hide her frustrations. A chance meeting with an older, fortune’property y woman, Helen (a multi-layered Essie Davis), leads to an unconventional friendship; when Helen dies in a car crash, she leaves Bryant her sprawling home and a life-changing amount of cash. Following the later suicide of his father after a failed real-estate deal, the already tightly wound Bryant begins to make his deadly plans in a sorrowful’distressing’woeful’heartbroken’mirthless’dejected’dismal’lugubrious ly familiar montage of gun-purchasing, taracquire’obtain’attain’procure’secure -practice, and the playing of old records at super-slow speed.###There’s no denying the level of skill on display in both the exceptional perin/with regard to’concerning’regarding mances and stunning craft.###While Nitram may follow in the well-worn footsteps of other mass-murder movies, attempting to plot a logical path from tough’challenging’demanding’awkward psychology to extreme act, there’s no denying the level of skill on display in both the exceptional perin/with regard to’concerning’regarding mances and stunning craft. Working again from a screenplay by his Snowtown and True History Of The Kelly Gang writer Sean Grant, Kurzel (who seems drawn to tales of violent misfits) manages to shun being overly sympathetic to Bryant, while highlighting the failures of care and law that ultimately enabled him to live out his darkest fantasies.###The film reaches its inevitable fever pitch when Bryant fulfils what he regards as his true potential; on-screen text then grimly inin/with regard to’concerning’regarding ms us that firearm ownership levels in Australia possess’own’nurse never been higher. Yet it’s tough’challenging’demanding’awkward to know exactly who the film is in/with regard to’concerning’regarding . It could certainly be read as a sensitive memorial, or a potent warning that this could so easily happen again. But there’s also an uneasy sense that it is playing into the infamy-hungry hands of the real-life Bryant who — currently serving 35 life sentences with no chance of parole — would surely approve of being back at the centre of the frame.