Engrossing Visitor well worth welcoming
Engrossing Visitor well worth welcoming
by Sara Michelle Fetters - SGN Contributing Writer

The Visitor
Now playing


Widower Walter Vale (Richard Jenkins) is college economics professor living in suburban Connecticut. Reluctantly, he agrees to fill in for a pregnant colleague at a conference in New York, arriving back to the apartment he still owns but hasn't visited since his wife's death with a heavy heart.

His malaise is short-lived, however, the moment he goes through the threshold and discovers immigrants Tarek (Haaz Sleiman) and Zainab (Danai Gurira) illegally renting his flat. The victims of a vicious scam, Walter can't throw the loving, if penniless, couple out on the street, instead deciding to let them stay until they can make other arrangements. After a while, the men strike up an unassuming friendship, and while his girlfriend disapproves, the Syrian refugee takes pride in the fact he's helping this quiet and unassuming man of numbers happily burst forth from inside his hardened shell.

After a tragic misunderstanding lands Tarek in a holding facility for illegal immigrants, Walter takes it upon himself to fight for his new friend's freedom. It is a burden and a hardship, but somehow the accountant does what he can, even paying for the lawyer to help with the case right out of his own pocket. But when Tarek's mother Mouna (Hiam Abbass) comes to New York to find out what is going on with her son, Walter discovers things are far more complicated then he'd fist imagined and that his life, as simple as it was, will no longer be the same.

With The Visitor, writer and director Thomas McCarthy has followed up his 2003 winner The Station Agent with a work of such staggeringly poetic genius I almost don't know where to begin. A simple story told with an eye for intelligence and delicate nuance, this subtly engrossing drama is an astonishing delight. By the time it was over, the film left me literally speechless, the only question really being if I'd brought enough tissues to soak up all of my gloriously cascading tears.

Veteran character actor Jenkins, in a role written just for him, is superb. Always a strong presence in films good (The Kingdom, Changing Lanes), bad (Random Hearts, Cheaper by the Dozen) and brilliant (Flirting with Disaster, The Witches of Eastwick), McCarthy gives him the spotlight, the actor digging so deeply into Walter's complicatedly fractured core it's impossible not to be moved. This is as intricately layered and emotionally vulnerable a portrait as any I'll likely see this year, and to say he's deserving of an Oscar nomination right here and now would be something akin to a colossal understatement.

Not that this is going to be an easy sit for everyone. With immigration reform such a hot-button issue, any picture having the guts to tackle the topic is going to face immediate questions regarding on which side of the political fence it stands. With heated opinions on both sides, I imagine people will bring in their own preconceptions about what story should be told and how it should be delivered long before they enter the theater, that divisive predisposition probably the biggest obstacle this sterling drama is going to face.

McCarthy cleverly circumvents this by making The Visitor an intimately human tale of an outsider awakening to his own broken soul and long-forgotten conscience. Walter is a wounded man, some would even say beyond repair, but this friendship with Tarek and the subsequent fight to keep him in the U.S. with the man's mother revitalizes the educator and opens his eyes to the spectacular wonders the world has to offer. While elements of this are sad, at times even devastating, the film is ultimately a beating drum signaling the arrival of hope and inspiration.

That's a rhythmic cadence everyone can relate to, and while the immigration issue is front and center, the filmmaker never thumps us over the head with didactic shouts of indignation and instead allows the audience to make up their own minds about the rights and the wrongs of what they've just seen. If anything, only a single moment near the end at the detention center feels forced and false, too preachy and in-your-face to work quite like it should. Otherwise this is a marvelous journey with nary a false note magnificently acted by its leads and full of understated graces impossible to forget, The Visitor an April guest well worth welcoming with enthusiastically open arms.