The Visitor presents a rich, complex world where people connect in unexpected ways. It is a fitting follow up to the themes McCarthy covered in The Station Agent.
The Visitor (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:110
Fresh:99
Rotten:11
Average Rating:7.7/10
Consensus: The Visitor is a heartfelt, humanistic drama that deftly explores identity, immigration, and other major post-9/11 issues.
Theatrical Release:04-07-2008
Synopsis:
In a world of six billion people, it only takes one to change your life. In actor and filmmaker Tom McCarthy’s follow-up to his award winning directorial debut The Station Agent, Richard Jenkins...
In a world of six billion people, it only takes one to change your life. In actor and filmmaker Tom McCarthy’s follow-up to his award winning directorial debut The Station Agent, Richard Jenkins (Six Feet Under) stars as a disillusioned Connecticut economics professor whose life is transformed by a chance encounter in New York City.
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
[More]
Starring: Richard Jenkins, Hiam Abbass, Haaz Sleiman, Danai Gurira
Starring: Richard Jenkins, Hiam Abbass, Haaz Sleiman, Danai Gurira
Director: Tom McCarthy
Director: Tom McCarthy
Screenwriter: Tom McCarthy
Producer: Mary Jane Skalski, Michael London
Composer: Jan A.P. Kaczmarek
Studio: Overture Films
Reviews for The Visitor
Dabbles in messages and liberal guilt, but more importantly, it sets up a reasonable and genuine space for a fascinating and heartbreaking character.
A film that is a combination immigrant/resurrection tale, Visitor tilts toward the soulful rather than the political and could be this year's humanistic indie hit.
Our patience with the characters' apathy and uninteresting demeanor is not rewarded enough.
In The Visitor, Jenkins finally gets a starring role, and he makes the most of the opportunity with a brilliantly sustained performance that gives depth, resonance and spiritual transcendence to what starts out to be one of his stock characters.
Beautifully acted and staged, but at odds with itself: the emphasis is not on the 'visitors' but on the uptight professor, who experiences a spiritual rebirth thanks to the life-affirming presence of his new Third World friends...
This is a simple story of human drama that provides an incentive to spend a couple of hours in a movie theater during a spring that has not provided many such reasons.
Scores by expanding its scope beyond the hot-button issue of illegal immigration to encompass themes of friendship and breaking free of a stifling routine.
The film works foremost as the experience of watching Richard Jenkins inhabit his role.
Surefire material to pluck the heartstrings and for thesentimentally inclined, but...
Exactly the type of movie the GOP would rather Americans not see, as it individualizes (rather than demonizes) its foreign characters and provides them with a collective voice that demands to be heard.
Depicts the way a professor's closed-off heart is opened by music, friendship, and love; one of the most touching and impressive films of the year.
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.
A beautiful, quiet, measured movie about the death of some American values since September 11, 2001.
A showcase role for otherwise supporting actor Richard Jenkins, and he makes the most of it without ever being showy.
If McCarthy is the divinity of the universe he creates, its patron saint is Frank Capra ... The primordial truth about Capra's and McCarthy's characters is that if you scratch beneath the surface, just about everyone is decent.
Character actor Richard Jenkins gives a performance that is at once restrained and speaks volumes, a breakthrough to leading man status after decades of supporting roles.
Cuts across one of the West's most contentious political issues without ever getting political. And it features a terrific lead performance from Jenkins.
Latest News for The Visitor
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