Tribeca 2025: Riz Ahmed and Lily James Take a Relay Race Through New York

Plenty of movies about whistleblowers have a scene (or several) where the hero is given the chance to accept a payout and walk away. What these movies rarely include is a scene where the whistleblower acquiesces and agrees to give up – or one where they decide, at more or less the last minute, that they’ve changed their mind and want the corporate hush money back on the table. This anticlimax in waiting is the unusual jumping-off point for Relay, a paranoid thriller that sneaks in its character study so stealthily that it takes a while to realize who is actually being studied.
The would-be whistleblower in question is Sarah (Lily James). She approaches a traditional law firm and explains her situation: At work, she raised questions about the harmful nature of a bioengineered food product, was punished and eventually fired for raising the issue, but kept a copy of the damning documents, thinking she would go public with this information. After some intense (if mostly off-screen) harassment, she’s ready to simply give the material back, but fears it may be too late for whatever corporate thugs have been hired to intimidate her. The law firm can’t help, but they give her contact information for someone who can: Ash (Riz Ahmed), a lone fixer, operating anonymously. He specializes in negotiating exactly this kind of takeback, exchanging sensitive documents for a hefty payout and keeping secured copies on hand to assure his client’s safety. We see a possible end result up front, as the movie opens with another whistleblower (Matthew Maher) holding a terse exchange with a CEO, arranged (and watched from a distance) by Ash.
Ash’s clients aren’t ever supposed to meet him, or even hear him. He moves through the shadows, communicating with them through a relay phone service, typically used to facilitate calls for people with disabilities. (Despite the service’s utility for the hearing impaired, Ahmed is not reprising his Sound of Metal character, further afflicted by hearing loss, at least so far as we can tell.) As such, Ahmed barely says a word for the first half of Relay, and even as director David Mackenzie moves to focus more on his life, Ahmed’s eyes typically convey more than his dialogue, about how Ash has willed himself into ghostliness as a defense mechanism against his own demons.
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