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where shall we buy zyrtec uk Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado, the two-man writer-director team, are swinging at serious targets here: their country’s uneasy relationship with torture and the uselessness of revenge as a response to unrightable wrongs. But their point soon wears itself out, and what remains is schlock with airs and tired black humour. Keshales and Papushado’s first film, Rabies, had the same allegorical ambitions, but its foundations were solid. By contrast, this feels like a house of sticks, and the breeze is picking up.