A former Canadian army sniper returns to a remote Canadian farm after tours in Afghanistan, seeking solace in familiar routines and the quiet of rural life. Yet, even in the country’s serene wilderness, he remains haunted by war’s invisible wounds. His nights are restless, filled with insomnia and flashbacks so vivid they collapse the boundary between memory and present reality. What was supposed to be a refuge becomes a mirror of his own fractured psyche, where silence echoes with ghosts only he can see.
The film unfolds as an intimate character study rather than a high-octane war saga. François Arnaud delivers a riveting performance as the unnamed sniper—or simply “Sniper”—infusing his role with stoic reserve and deep emotional currents. His movements, expressions, and silences speak volumes: a trembling hand, a hollow stare, a moment of quiet despair. Through him, the audience confronts the human cost of conflict and the struggle to reclaim one’s humanity amid psychological ruin
Visually, the film is stark and atmospheric. Cinematographer Duraid Munajim captures the contrast between the cold hues of urban isolation and the haunting beauty of Canada’s wilderness. Long, meditative shots allow viewers to feel the sniper’s loneliness—each frame frozen in emotional numbness, each silent snow-laden field reflecting the numbness inside him . The editing blends memories and present moments into a non-linear tapestry, mirroring the fragmentation of the sniper’s mind.

At its core, the narrative is a meditation on trauma and the slippery terrain of healing. The film avoids overt action in favor of emotional realism: PTSD is not a plot device but the core condition of every scene. Rather than resolve neatly, the story offers a moment of choic—quiet, devastating, and tinged with the possibility of redemption—that resonates long after the credits roll .

Yet the film’s ambition comes with risks. Its deliberate pacing and minimal dialogue make it feel uneven or slow to some viewers. Critics note that while Arnaud’s performance anchors the film, supporting characters remain underdeveloped and the narrative sometimes drifts without clear emotional payoff. Still, for those attuned to introspection and psychological depth, this quiet war drama offers a powerful, haunting experience.
In the end, Canadian Sniper (2024) is not about bullets or combat tactics—it’s about what remains after the shooting stops. It’s a portrait of a soldier stranded in peacetime, wrestling with memories that won’t let go. There are no dramatic triumphs here, only the slow, fragile emergence of a will to live—and perhaps to heal—from the rubble of conflict.





