Writer/director/actor Richard Ayoade has two feet firmly in comedic quirk. Heโ€™s most recognizable as straitlaced, bespectacled Moss from the British comedy series The IT Club, and his directorial film debut, 2010โ€™s Submarine, was a smart, offbeat take on the coming-of-age genre. But while thereโ€™s a subtle, sly sense of humor to Ayoadeโ€™s new project, an adaptation of the Dostoyevsky novella The Double, for the most part itโ€™s about as far from the world of quirky comedies as itโ€™s possible to get.

In a dreary, undefined bureaucratic dystopiaโ€”Brazil is an unavoidable touchstoneโ€”Jesse Eisenberg stars as James Simon, a sad-sack office drone whoโ€™s creepily obsessed with a girl who works in the copy room. One day, a new man appears at the office: Simon James, also played by Eisenberg. Simon is in every way the opposite of James. Heโ€™s friendly, appealing to women, and confident where James is clumsy, careless, and anxious. And while Simon initially positions himself as an ally, soon their relationship takes a menacing turn, threatening Jamesโ€™s very sense of identity.

The Double is more interested in questions than answers: Is Simon a hallucination? Has James lost his mind? Itโ€™s not an entirely satisfying experience, if we define โ€œsatisfyingโ€ as โ€œplot tied up with a bow on itโ€โ€”but it is a curious, provocative, and absorbing one. recommended