I'm actually a good person. A bad deed. The debut picture of the young director Ryan Todd is initially perceived as the confession of a seemingly normal person in whose life something went wrong. Maybe he's crazy. Or died.
The viewer will have to worry about the fate of the characters in this movie, because they were in a bad situation - in the basement to the maniac. Or they might get hit.
But that's not really what the movie is about. Rather, it is a charade of scenes shot meticulously, close-up. Eyes, hands, gestures - everything is very authentic, very accurate, as in life. Even Love herself, the Queen of Feelings, tries to penetrate the soul to the maniac, although this is absurd, of course.
The film is very difficult for a clear classification: about a maniac? Nope. About the schizophrenic, it seems, yes, but... “But” and “but” are everywhere.
It seems that initially the script was simpler - a maniac lives, lives. But director R. Todd resisted and the script was remade to increase the degree of loading of the viewer.
From the point of view of cinematographic values, the film is flawless. The acting is quite professional, the camera work is excellent. In some ways, the style of filming is similar to the style of F. Ozon.
A film for fans of difficult, psychologically rich cinema.
9 from 10.