Australia was settled as a penal colony, so it makes perfect sense its crime movies are excellent. Earlier this year it gave us The Square, a darkly hilarious fable that saw theft and adultery spiral into arson and murder. Now The Squareโ€™s screenwriter, actor Joel Edgerton, returns in director David Michodโ€™s Animal Kingdom, a story about a Melbourne crime family that makes the Corleones look like the Brady Bunch.

As teenager J Cody (James Frecheville) is blithely watching television one day, his mother dies of a heroin overdose. So J goes off to live with his grandma Smurf (the excellent Jacki Weaver) and his half-wit uncles Craig (Sullivan Stapleton) and Darren (Luke Ford). Craig and Darren are small-time crooks working under the leadership of Baz (Edgerton), a surprisingly gentle and magnanimous character who makes sure everyone is happy and safe. But when Bazโ€™s partnerโ€”and Jโ€™s uncleโ€”Pope (Ben Mendelsohn) comes out of hiding, everything falls apart.

The Cody family is a fascinating tableau, with an undercurrent of violence undermining every gesture of affection. Grandma Smurf, in particular, is a devil of a character: a cute, diminutive, affectionate woman with a heart of steel. Edgerton, too, does excellent work in a smaller roleโ€”and I was genuinely taken aback by what happened to his character, so Iโ€™ll stop discussing it hereโ€”but the movie is carried by Frecheville, whose poker face at first suggests slowness, but eventually reveals a killer survival instinct to navigate the Codysโ€™ crooked familial waters.

Guy Pearce also has a strong role as a detective trying to get J to squeal on his family. The teenager resists, obviously, and some of the latter plot workings are a little confusing, but Animal Kingdom ends up being a brutal, gripping crime story and a knockout of a family drama. recommended