Director Elliott Lester tries his best to make this film ( said to be inspired by true events) look like a psychological thriller. He even succeeds to a certain extent as there’s an air of melancholy, uncertainty and ambiguity throughout. Sadly, that’s not enough to hold your attention.Lester struggles to convert his compelling two-line story idea into a full-fledged feature film that strikes a chord with the audience. The wafer-thinplot runs out of steam and so does our patience, as we try to decode Roman and Jake’s behaviour and train of thought. While the execution lures you into closely observing and studying these two characters and their differing mind-set, the screenplay fails to move you beyond that. You don’t feel emotionally attached or invested in them.To make things worse, Schwarzenegger( who doubles up as a co-producer here) seems brazenly uninvolved. He sleepwalks through the role and contributes heavily in turning the film into a sleep-inducing drama, which rides on misery. McNairy however, is convincing and infuses life and soul into the otherwise drab and overstretched proceeding. But given the nature of the film, he alone cannot salvage this stagnant emotional fare.Aftermath, with its promising premise, could have been an intense drama but what you get instead is a wandering, forgettable story that reeks of nothingness.