After Ratcatcher (1999) and Morvern Callar (2002), Lynne Ramsay’s long-awaited new film maintains the enviable quality control in her expressively intoxicating output. Tackling Lionel Shriver’s bestselling first-person novel, Ramsay has somehow remained true to the material yet found her own edgy poetry within it, orchestrating vivid colour and an unsettlingly effective sound-mix to deliver us inside the psyche of traumatised suburban mum Tilda Swinton. We realise the sacrifice she’s made by relinquishing her own prospects for travel and creative fulfilment to start a family, yet her son proves a malign, bristling presence who, it’s soon apparent, has committed an atrocity whose aftershock she confronts every day.