The
Flick Chick
Judy Thorburn
Las Vegas Tribune
http://www.lasvegastribune.com
Las Vegas Round The Clock
http://www.lasvegasroundheclock.com
The Women Film Critics Circle
http://www.wfcc.wordpress.com
judyt@theflickchicks.com
kreatia@aol.com

"THE VISITOR" - TRAVELS AN
EMOTIONALLY REWARDING ROAD
   
After his impressive directorial debut with his 2003 indie hit, The Station
Agent, filmmaker Tom McCarthy proves he is a force to be reckoned with.
Here, helming his second film, the writer/director delivers another poignant
flick about the human condition with a storyline that also takes a critical
look at our government’s treatment of illegal immigrants in post 911
America.
Although the Academy tends to overlook earlier in the year performances,
veteran character actor Richard Jenkins (he played the deceased father in 6
Feet Under), in his first leading role, gives a restrained and moving
performance that should be remembered when the ballots go out at the end of
2008.
The bespectacled and balding sixtieth Jenkins plays Walter Vale, a
Connecticut economics professor who goes about his daily routines as a
broken, disconnected man since the his wife, a classical pianist, died. Vale
seems to have lost his passion for his work that includes teaching and
writing and instead is floundering through life. Even attempts in learning
to play the piano as a comforting mechanism, proves disappointing. But
things change when the lonely professor is sent to Manhattan to present a
paper at a conference. Upon entering his rarely visited New York City
apartment, Vale is shocked to find a couple of young foreigners, Tarek (Haaz
Sleiman) from Syria and his Senegalese girlfriend Zainab (Danai Gurira)
living there as innocent victims of a con man who rented them the place
under false pretense.
When it becomes clear that the couple has no place to go and would be left
out in the cold, the guarded Vale shows some kindness and invites them to
share his apartment which brings about unexpected consequences. It all
starts when Tarek, an accomplished musician on the African drum delivers
rhythmic beats on the instrument that grabs Vale’s attention and stirs some
life in the saddened professor. Tarek begins to teach the older man how to
play the drum and soon a bond and friendship develops between the two that
transcends age and cultural differences.
Just when things are running smoothly, Tarek is arrested for a misunderstood
subway incident. Tarek’s status as an illegal immigrant comes into play, and
as a result he is sent to a detention center in Queens where the threat of
being deported back to his homeland is evident. Since Zainab is also illegal
she cannot risk visiting her incarcerated boyfriend; so Vale takes it upon
himself to be Tarek’s advocate. He hires an attorney and does whatever he
can to keep Tarek from being deported but finds himself up against a wall of
an unfair and unyielding political bureaucracy.
Meanwhile Tarek’s mother, Moana (Israeli actress Hiam Abbass) who has been
living in Michigan, is worried that she hasn’t heard from her son in days,
and arrives in New York, a move that adds another twist to the story. Drawn
by their mutual quest to set Tarek free, Vale and the lovely woman are drawn
closer together in this well written script that doesn’t stoop to gratuitous
sex scenes but quietly shows Vale’s passion, that has long been repressed,
slowly being awakened in tender, heart rendering scenes.
Like his first film McCarthy’s running theme is the importance of human
connections in a world that can be alien, both literally and figuratively.
With The Visitor the filmmaker delivers a sensitive character study of one
man, whose connection with strangers allows him to break out of his self
imposed shell and find a purpose and meaning in his life. McCarthy also
makes a point of showing a parallel between Vale’s initial human detachment
and post 911 America. The biased and sympathetic stand on illegal immigrants
who are breaking the law is another issue altogether and, as such, the
comparison is unjust.
However, there is no argument that McCarthy delivers a poignant film with
wonderful performances by Jenkins and his supporting cast. In spite of its
bleeding heart political stand, the Visitor makes its theatrical entrance as
an unforgettable, welcome character drama.
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