Sophisticated, timely and compelling, it's a quintessential post-9/11 drama.
The Visitor (2008)
Sixty-two-year-old Walter Vale (Jenkins) is sleepwalking through his life. Having lost his passion for teaching and writing, he fills the void by unsuccessfully trying to learn to play classical piano. When his college sends him to Manhattan to attend a conference, Walter is surprised to find a young couple has taken up residence in his apartment. Victims of a real estate scam, Tarek (Haaz Sleiman), a Syrian man, and Zainab (Danai Gurira), his Senegalese girlfriend, have nowhere else to go. In the first of a series of tests of the heart, Walter reluctantly allows the couple to stay with him.
Touched by his kindness, Tarek, a talented musician, insists on teaching the aging academic to play the African drum. The instrument’s exuberant rhythms revitalize Walter’s faltering spirit and open his eyes to a vibrant world of local jazz clubs and Central Park drum circles. As the friendship between the two men deepens, the differences in culture, age and temperament fall away.
After being stopped by police in the subway, Tarek is arrested as an undocumented citizen and held for deportation. As his situation turns desperate, Walter finds himself compelled to help his new friend with a passion he thought he had long ago lost. When Tarek’s beautiful mother Mouna (Hiam Abbass) arrives unexpectedly in search of her son, the professor’s personal commitment develops into an unlikely romance.
And it’s through these new found connections with these virtual strangers that Walter is awakened to a new world and a new life. --© Overture Films [Less]
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Richard Jenkins, Hiam Abbass, Haaz Sleiman, Danai Gurira
Screenwriter: Tom McCarthy
Producer: Mary Jane Skalski, Michael London
Composer: Jan A.P. Kaczmarek
Reviews
It’s almost funny how often and how closely The Visitor teeters toward cliché, only to deliver one gently genuine moment after another.
The Visitor might unite both sides of the illegal immigration debate - at least for two hours.
Jenkins, a veteran character actor perhaps best known as the dead father on Six Feet Under, gets the role of a career here...
The Visitor may not have any big names in its cast, but it certainly makes up for that by having a lot of character.
As close to a perfect movie as we're likely to see this year.
(Richard) Jenkins doesn't waste a motion or a word while bestowing on us an introspective acting clinic. They don't call them character actors for nothing.
At first glance Walter isn't a guy you want to spend two hours with. But by the end of the film, you don't want to see him go. Jenkins is like that: He sneaks up on you and steals your heart with light-fingered skill.
The Visitor is a tiny treasure of a movie. This is a wistful comedy that quickly finds its rhythm, but never lets that groove become a rut.
The real subject here isn’t post-9/11 xenophobia but rather friendship, how it changes us, heals us and how the arbitrary intrusion of outside forces both threatens and strengthens us.
Poignant, intelligent, thematically nuanced and character-driven, The Visitor is a drama about illegal aliens in which the native son is the brother from another planet.
[Director] McCarthy has an undeniable way with actors, and it sustains our interest in this overt Good Samaritan tale.
The movie is grounded in a fundamental difficulty, that Walter's education is achieved by his engagement with this set of brown and black people.
This is one of those surprising little gems that make you happy to be an ardent moviegoer.
This is unquestionably one of the most moving motion pictures you will ever see, and yet, at film's end, you will be left wanting for more.
A lovely, quietly touching film that approaches a provocative and topical subject with dramatic sensitivity and graceful understatement.
The Visitor is a small movie, but its emotions could not be writ any larger.
Awards season may still be many months away, but it's not too early to declare both the filmmaker and Jenkins Oscar-worthy.
The film becomes less about the suffering of immigrants who have never enjoyed the embrace of Ellis Island than the righteous indignation of a liberal intelligentsia raging against its own powerlessness.
Related Forums
by: Bogart22 4/10
Videos
Watch Now >>
News
posted by April 07, 2008
There is no such thing as a Richard Jenkins movie, though he's been in more than 70 of them. Even in his best-known role --...
posted by Tim Ryan September 12, 2007
This week in RTIndie, we have a roundup of the some key indie acquisitions from the Toronto Film festival. Also, our DVD...

