‘I never show a single image of torture,” says French director Jonathan Millet. “When you leave things off-screen, often the image the viewer creates are the ones that are most deeply anchored in their fears and anxieties.” Millet’s new film, Ghost Trail, follows a Syrian refugee in Strasbourg as he attempts to locate the man who brutalised him in Sednaya prison, Damascus.

Ghost Trail therefore joins the roll call of cerebral films that manufacture an uncanny power from what isn’t depicted. But here, it’s not achieved in exactly the same fashion as ones where the consequential action is cropped out of view, like Auschwitz over the picket fence in The Zone of Interest . In Millet’s film, the invisible is compacted inside characters doing ostensibly banal things, more akin to Chantal Ake

See Full Page