Dirty Pretty Things (2002) [Blu-ray]
Crime | Drama | Thriller
Okwe, a kind-hearted Nigerian doctor, and Senay, a Turkish chambermaid, work at the same West London hotel. The hotel is run by Senor "Sneaky" and is the sort of place where "dirty business" like drug dealing and prostitution takes place. However, when
Okwe finds a human heart in one of the toilets, he uncovers something far more sinister than just a common crime.
Storyline: Okwe is an illegal Nigerian immigrant leading a hard life and struggling to survive in London's underground. He works as a hotel receptionist in the night time and as he has a doctor degree he practices some medicine,
during the day, in a very odd way . Besides that he must constantly escape from Immigration officers. One day Okwe discovers by chance an illegal scheme of surgeries is being lead by Juan, his boss in the hotel. Juan quickly comes up with a tempting
proposal: if Okwe accepts to perform the illegal surgeries he makes a lot of money and gets legalized situation in the U.K. Can Okwe keep his moral values intact? Written by Weslley Gonçalves
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, July 14, 2012 -- There's a lot to love about Director Stephen Frears' (The Queen) Dirty Pretty Things, chief amongst them that it's different. The movie doesn't
really fall into any one category, even if it shows sighs of the Thriller, the Drama, and the Character Study. It's a smooth, intoxicating picture, one that effortlessly pulls the audience into the dark London world where anything can happen and
everything does. Best, the movie is incredibly well acted, headlined by a pair of highly talented performers at their very best and supported by several very strong, seamless efforts. The movie is thematically dark but not overwhelmingly so from a visual
perspective. It's often impossible to predict where the movie is going, how it's going to get there, or when a shift will occur. It's extraordinarily well paced, even if it's more of a deliberate dialogue-heavy and character arc-based film. In short,
there's really nothing to dislike about the movie. It's not for everyone, but anyone interested in a movie that diverges from the mainstream without playing as too odd or detached from reality should make sure to watch Dirty Pretty
Things.
Okwe (Chiwetel Ejiofor, Redbelt) is a Nigerian living in London by way of New York City. He drives a cab by day and works the front desk -- amongst other duties -- at the prestigious Baltic Hotel by night. He rarely sleeps, stimulates himself awake
with frequency, and crashes with fellow hotel employee and Turkish immigrant Senay Gelik (Audrey Tautou, The Da Vinci Code) when he can catch a few Z's. Their is a strictly platonic relationship, two people just trying to get by in the big city.
Senay is forced to quit her job at the hotel and move on when immigration authorities effort to track her down there. Her new job might be temporarily safer, but it comes with its share of problems, the sort of problems pretty young ladies down on their
luck must face when working for overpowering men. Meanwhile, Okwe discovers a human heart in an overflowing hotel room toilet. It turns out that the hotel's manager (Sergi López, Pan's Labyrinth) runs an underground human organ harvesting
operation, which he sells for counterfeited passports. He learns of Okwe's history in the medical profession -- which the cab company bossman also knows but keeps on the down-low in exchange for treatments -- and demands he enter into the organ harvesting
scheme. How will the fates of all three key players interconnect?
Secrets, questions of morality and ethics, despair, sickness, rape, black markets, murder, and all sorts of sordid stuff define Dirty Pretty Things, most of the movie with the emphasis on the former in its title rather than the latter. Yet it's the
combination of the two, the struggle to achieve one while leaving the other behind that's the key to the story's success. The picture focuses largely on the plight of two immigrants in modern-day London, but the stories of hopelessness, hiding, fear, and
other soul-tearing states of life play with a somewhat more universal theme, one that might be regrettably relatable by any number of people of any state of life and any background. The movie depicts two people attempting to live new lives, leaving the
old behind and wanting only to work and blend in. It's those around them who make their lives a challenge, whether for legal reasons or simply to take advantage of their plights, for Okwe blackmail for his skills, for Senay her body. The picture traverses
through some incredibly dark scenarios and paints a bleak picture of two lives in flux and fear and uncertainty, yet the movie proves absolutely absorbing and impossible to resist; no matter how unforgiving it may be, no matter how tiny and distant the
ray of hope, one cannot stop watching, largely thanks to both the intoxicating structure and the incredible performances that shape it.
Director Stephen Frears brings a steadying presence to the movie, though certainly Dirty Pretty Things is a product not exclusively of Frears' direction but also of Steven Knight's Oscar-nomianted script shaped by dark mystery, dramatic intensity,
and complex characters, characters brought to life by standout acting. That's not a bash on Fears or even to suggest that his work is less-than-stellar here. Frears allows the actors and story to carry the film, but he shoots in such a well-defined,
albeit subtle, way that he captures the essence of the emotions the characters feel and the scenarios through which they live with startling precision. The picture features several great performances, including a pair of wonderful supporting efforts from
Sergi López and Sophie Okonedo as the hotel manager and a prostitute who frequents the hotel, respectively. Audrey Tautou dazzles as Senay, but the movie is absolutely shaped by a wonderfully complex, absorbing, and seamless performance from Chiwetel
Ejiofor, easily one of the most under-appreciated actors working today and deserving of an Oscar nomination for his work here. Ejiofor's nuanced performance digs deep and builds a character from the inside out and is the movie's greatest asset. From his
first scenes forward, Ejiofor easily draws his audience into the character, into his world. Who is he, what is doing, and where is he going? Why is he important, what is he hiding, and what is his story? It's a character with whom audiences can both
instantly relate and gradually discover. Ejiofor's work is the stuff of acting of the highest degree, a complete performance and one worthy of far more recognition.
Dirty Pretty Things is a fabulous picture, completely absorbing though emotionally challenging and, sometimes, visually difficult. It's not necessarily graphic, but the scenarios, the unseen, and the possible are enough to make audiences squirm.
It's a complete package sort of movie, a movie that's unique, intoxicating, well-written, nicely directed, perfectly paced, and exceptionally acted. In short, Dirty Pretty Things is one of 2002's best, not to be missed for many reasons, not the
least of which is the standout performance by Chiwetel Ejiofor. Echo Bridge's Blu-ray release of Dirty Pretty Things features adequate video, good audio, and a couple of supplements. Highly recommended on the strength of the film.
[CSW] -3.6- Netfliz Streamed - A nearly perfect blend of social commentary art film and fast paced, popcorn-munching suspense flick. The script is excellent, the cinematography gorgeous, but the best thing about this film is the actors. Chjwetel Ejiofor
is compelling, loveable and just plain amazing as the illegal immigrant Nigerian doctor forced to work two jobs, one as a taxi driver, the other as hotel concierge. Audrey Tautou is funny, heartbreaking and razor sharp as his lovestruck Turkish friend.
But many of the supporting cast is just as impressive and entertaining: the charming, highly charismatic Sergi López as the evil hotel boss, Benedict Wong as the dryly funny hospital morgue employee and pretty feisty Sophie Okonedo as the Cockney
prostitute. I don't want to give too much of the plot away, but suffice it to say that it will keep you on the edge of your seat for the entire film. This is a beautiful, smart, engaging film. I highly recommend it..
[V30-A3.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.
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