Tuner: Movie Review
Cast: Leo Woodall, Dustin Hoffman, Havana Rose Liu, Lior Raz, Tovah Feldshuh, Jean Reno
Director: Daniel Roher
A movie about a safe-cracker who gets in way above his head may not sound like the most exciting of premises.
But Navalny director Daniel Roher, making his debut as a feature director after cutting his teeth in documentaries, does much work up front to ensure that there are few cliches and plenty of genial surprises in this overly familiar tale.
The puppy-faced Woodall (One Day, The White Lotus) plays Niki, a genius piano tuner whose hearing condition of hyperacusis, an over-sensitivity to sounds around him, makes him a genius on the piano tuning front. Wearing earplugs all day to prevent noise from jarring him and over-the-ear headphones when in public, Niki works with Dustin Hoffman's Harry Horowitz, who's worked as a tuner for over 30 years, but is battling hearing loss and potential dementia.
When Harry's dementia stops him getting into a safe where he's stashed medical aid, Niki discovers his sensitive ears help to unlock the safe. And when on a routine job, Niki meets Uri (Raz), the owner of a security firm which caters to rich clients and impresses him by opening another locked safe. However, Uri's not 100% on the level, telling Niki he could use his talents to help him out.
Things come further to a head when Harry's hospitalised and Niki needs money to keep the company afloat and the medical bills paid. Suddenly he finds the pull of Uri's desire to rob his rich clients of valuable items too much to resist - but before he knows it, he's in over his head.
There's much to enjoy in Tuner, an unfussy, unforced heist movie that does a lot of the solid lifting early on - plenty of which helps it through any familiar plot contrivances.
Along with a jazzy soundtrack, there's fizzy banter back and forth between the avuncular Harry and his charge Niki. Plenty of quick cuts, easy and warm dialogue between the pair and a running gag that their high-end clients see them only as odd job men able to turn their skills to other more menial needs when desired. Coupled with Niki's gently burgeoning relationship with concert pianist Ruthie (Liu), the film builds a solid emotive base from which to threaten the foundations.
And while Woodall's almost-dialled back performance anchors the whole thing, the moral clash he faces with Uri's desire to play Robin Hood and rob his clients of a few items here and there which he claims they won't notice is a solidly executed one. There's one moment when Uri's psychological manipulation of Niki works exceptionally well, with the language barrier subsequently revealing to the truth of the matter to his Israeli comrades.
With touches of Rain Man, Good Will Hunting and Robin Hood, as well as a plethora of 90s movie thrillers, Tuner benefits from solid character work and its work in escalating the tension and paying off one narrative thread late in the day to devastating effect.
Plus, an incredible soundscape from Oscar-winning sound designer Johnnie Best does much to let us into the aural terror of Niki's world - never has an air horn been such a devastating threat before.
Pitch perfect in parts and hitting the right note, this finely tuned thriller has the capacity to surprise when it needs to - and does so in disarmingly clever and original ways.