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Dirty
Pretty Things
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Immigrants
struggle to start new life
Dirty
Pretty Things
Stars
Audrey Tatou, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Benedict Wong
Reviewer: LT Simone Heyer
Rating:
3 Stars
Stepping
away from the mainstream, Dirty Pretty Things is a British
production, set London.
Okwe (Ejiofor), a Nigerian immigrant, holds a day job driving
cabs and giving medical advice to his thuggish boss.
He has a night job at the front desk of the Baltic Hotel under
an equally thuggish boss. Memories from his past life keep
him from sleeping, and the money he earns will establish his
new life.
He rents a couch from Shania (Tatou), a Turkish asylum seeker,
who works as a maid at the Baltic.
The fine looking establishment has a seedy underbelly, perhaps
reflecting everyday London society.
Okwe is called to check out a room with a blocked toilet and
what he finds unravels a mystery that he’s firmly encouraged
to stay away from by threat of deportation.
When thuggish boss number two realises Okwe is a doctor by
trade, he puts plans into place to have Okwe help out in an
illegal trade thriving in the hotel.
Dirty Pretty Things is about the dirty things in life which
must be made pretty, and how people must adapt when they can
– often just to survive.
Frenchwoman Audrey Tatou, who captivated us with Amelie, shines
as an English speaker with a heavy Turkish accent; brave yet
naïve in a dark world.
The unassuming Chiwetel Ejiofor is perfect in his role of
having two lives completely independent of his former life
in Nigeria.
This is a sad film, giving a good look at what might go on
in the lives of immigrants behind the scenes.
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