Closed Circuit

Closed Circuit is a run-of-the-mill thriller elevated just enough by the intelligence of its cast and makers. People who complain that “they” don’t make movies for adults anymore will probably be pleased with this story of lawyers (and former lovers) who must work together to defend a man arrested for a deadly terrorist bombing. The movie has class and an effectively restrained style—watching Closed Circuit, you feel like you’re in the hands of seasoned pros whose only desire is to tell a good, unflashy yarn. However, the fact that little of it lingers in the memory after the end credits roll is indicative of how generally unremarkable the whole project is.
The film is directed by John Crowley, whose 2007 drama Boy A proved to be a breakthrough for both him and his star, Andrew Garfield. Closed Circuit isn’t a similarly intimate character study, though: This is a post-9/11, government-conspiracy thriller set in London, where an explosion has rocked a morning market, killing and injuring dozens. The police have apprehended a suspect from a sleeper cell, Farroukh Erdogan (Denis Moschitto), and two defense lawyers have been selected to represent him at trial: the stoic Martin Rose (Eric Bana) and the aloof Claudia Simmons-Howe (Rebecca Hall). The fact that Martin got the job because Farroukh’s previous lawyer was killed under suspicious circumstances doesn’t seem to bother him as much as it should.
Martin and Claudia are both skilled attorneys, but they’re hiding a secret: They used to be engaged in an affair when Martin was married. Keeping this information from the Attorney General (Jim Broadbent), they go about preparing Farroukh’s legal defense, which involves an interesting wrinkle because of British law. Claudia, as Special Advocate, will alone be shown classified evidence that the government will use in its case against her client. She can’t share the evidence with Farroukh or Martin, but she can argue that it needs to be included in the closed-door portion of the trial.