The Visitor

The Visitor. Overture Films

 

Watched a very good film on DVD last night. The Visitor is a story about an emo­tion­ally repressed col­lege pro­fes­sor in Connecticut, a wid­ower who seems to have set­tled into his own level of depres­sion and is just going through the motions. Until. Until he is forced to give a paper at a con­fer­ence in New York City and dis­cov­ers squat­ters liv­ing in his apart­ment. Two ille­gal immi­grants, seek­ing a bet­ter life. A gifted drum­mer from Syria, played by Haaz Sleiman, and his girl­friend from Senegal, played by Danai Jekesai Gurira. Tarek and Zainab think they are liv­ing in the apart­ment legally, hav­ing sub­let from a con­man. Apparently, this is all too com­mon. After some com­mo­tion, the cou­ple leaves, but Walter, the pro­fes­sor, played by Richard Jenkins, goes after them and asks them to come back and stay. In sub­tle and pro­found ways, his life is altered from that moment on.

The title is mag­i­cal, ironic, ambigu­ous and know­ing. Walter Vale is the vis­i­tor into another cul­ture. Tarek teaches him how to drum in the African style, and lit­tle by lit­tle, Walter loosens up and embraces that new cul­ture. What makes this all the more pow­er­ful is the incred­i­ble sub­tlety of the Jenkins per­for­mance. You actu­ally have to watch him closely to notice the changes. It’s not the typ­i­cal bom­bas­tic, all too obvi­ous, 180 degrees of change Hollywood often brings us. As if all too many direc­tors sim­ply don’t trust the audi­ence to observe. Observe closely. Notice things. Note small dif­fer­ences, care­ful change. So, Tarek and Zainab are vis­tors to America, to New York City, and so is Walter. He vis­its a new cul­ture and seeks a return to his own musi­cal roots. His wife was a con­cert pianist, and he wants to some­how pay homage to her through his own musi­cal awak­en­ing. A vis­tor to him­self and to oth­ers. Everyone is a vis­i­tor in some way.

Enter the next pivot point. Walter and Tarek have become fast friends and are on their way to play drums together in the city. Tarek is stopped in the sub­way by INS employ­ees, arrested and taken away. Walter finds out where he’s been taken, tries to help, gets a lawyer and vis­its him in the deten­tion cen­ter. Along comes Tarek’s mother (played by Hiam Abbass), all the way from Michigan, seek­ing her son. Their rela­tion­ship is again some­thing we the viewer need to watch closely, care­fully, note the changes, note the small alter­ations in behav­ior, their con­nec­tion, moods and con­cern for one another.

The end­ing is not typ­i­cal of Hollywood. But it’s real. The movie is pro­foundly sad in many ways, but filled with joy. It is provoca­tively real­is­tic in the best sense. It makes us think. It should make us rethink cur­rent pol­icy. But it is also “art” because it deals with dif­fi­cult, com­plex things in a dif­fi­cult, com­plex way that doesn’t wear that on its sleeve. It is a com­pletely unpre­ten­tious film and open to so much. It’s open to the vis­i­tor in all of us.

 

 

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