Dirty Pretty Things (film)

Dirty Pretty Things is a 2002 British social thriller film directed by Stephen Frears and written by Steven Knight.[5][6] Following the lives of two immigrants in London, it was filmed in a documentary style and was produced by BBC Films and Celador Films, and distributed by Buena Vista International through Miramax Films.

Dirty Pretty Things
Promotional film poster
Directed byStephen Frears
Produced byTracey Seaward
Robert Jones
Written bySteven Knight
StarringChiwetel Ejiofor
Audrey Tautou
Sergi López
Sophie Okonedo
Benedict Wong
Zlatko Buric
Music byNathan Larson
CinematographyChris Menges
Edited byMick Audsley
Production
company
Distributed byBuena Vista International
Release date
  • 5 September 2002 (2002-09-05)
(Venice)
  • 13 December 2002 (2002-12-13)
Running time
97 minutes[1]
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$10 million[2][3]
Box office$13,904,766[4]

Plot

Okwe is an illegal West African immigrant (home country not initially named) to the United Kingdom who drives a cab in London during the day and works at the front desk of a hotel at night. The hotel is staffed with many immigrants, both legal and illegal. Okwe keeps himself awake by chewing khat, a herbal stimulant. A doctor in his home country, he was forced to flee after being falsely accused of murdering his wife. In London, he is pressed into giving medical treatment to other poor immigrants, including fellow cab drivers with venereal diseases. Okwe's friend Guo Yi, an employee at a hospital mortuary, provides him with antibiotics under the table.

A prostitute known as Juliette, who plies her trade in the hotel, informs Okwe about a blocked toilet in one of the hotel rooms. He fishes out the blockage and finds a human heart. The manager of the hotel, Juan, runs an illegal operation at the hotel wherein immigrants swap kidneys for forged passports. After learning of Okwe's past as a doctor, Juan pressures him to join his operation as a surgeon, but Okwe refuses.

Senay is a Turkish Muslim seeking asylum, who also works at the hotel, as a cleaner. Her immigration status allows her to stay in the UK providing she does not work; the hotel is a perfect cover because she is not named on its books. She allows Okwe to sleep on her sofa when she is not home, as she is from a conservative culture in which men and women who are not married to one another do not spend the night together, alone, under the same roof.

Senay is frightened after a visit from the Immigration Service, and convinces Okwe to leave before the authorities find him in her home. The officials find a book of matches from the hotel and decide to inspect it before Senay arrives for her early morning shift. Okwe asks the doorman to intercept Senay; the officials don't catch her, but she can no longer work at the hotel. She begins working in a sweatshop making clothes, but the officials raid that site, too. The entire staff flee to the roof while the manager gets rid of the Immigration agents. The manager will let Senay keep her job and promises not to report her to the authorities only if she will perform oral sex on him. After a couple of such sessions, she refuses to cooperate and bites him, then flees with an expensive coat and some dresses.

Okwe finds her a place to stay at the hospital mortuary, but Senay panics. She asks him to raise money for her to travel to America by selling the stolen clothes and acting as a surgeon in Juan's organ business. Okwe refuses.

In desperation, Senay agrees to exchange a kidney for a passport. As a "deal maker", Juan takes her virginity as well, and later Juliette provides her with the morning-after pill. After learning of Senay's plan, Okwe tells Juan that he will perform the operation to ensure her safety, but only if Juan provides them both with passports under different names. After Juan delivers the passports, Okwe and Senay drug him, surgically remove his kidney, and sell it to Juan's contact.

Okwe plans to use his new identity to return to his young daughter in Nigeria, and Senay plans to start a new life in New York City. Before they part at Stansted Airport, she gives him her cousin's address in New York. They mouth the words, "I love you", to each other. Senay boards her plane, and Okwe calls long-distance to his daughter to tell her he is coming home at last.

Cast

Reception

Critical response

Dirty Pretty Things received positive reviews. Metacritic gives it a rating of 78/100 based on reviews from 35 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[7] Rotten Tomatoes gives it a score of 94% judging it "Certified Fresh", based on 142 reviews, and an average rating of 7.83/10. The site's critical consensus describes the film as, "An illuminating and nuanced film about the exploitation of illegal immigrants."[8] J. R. Jones of The Chicago Reader described it as an "impressive mix of entertainment and social comment, spinning a great mystery even as it confronts an ugly world".[9] The New Yorker called the film "a social thriller—a creepy, tightly knit suspense film that, on the fly, reveals more about the lives of immigrants in London than the most scrupulously earnest documentary."[6] a sentiment echoed by the authors of Sociology: An Introductory Textbook and Reader of the film as being "not a documentary but a social thriller which blends aspects of the global urban legends about child kidnapping for organs and prostitutes drugging unsuspecting barflies who wake up in a hotel bathtub minus a kidney."[5]

Accolades

Dirty Pretty Things was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay and won a British Independent Film Award for Best Independent British Film in 2003. For his performance as Okwe, Chiwetel Ejiofor won the 2003 British Independent Film Award for Best Actor.

References

  1. "Dirty Pretty Things (15)". British Board of Film Classification. 25 October 2002. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  2. http://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Dirty-Pretty-Things
  3. "Dirty Pretty Things (2004) - Box office / business". Amazon. Internet Movie Database. 24 February 2004. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  4. Dirty Pretty Things at Box Office Mojo
  5. Nehring, Daniel; Plummer, Ken (2014). Sociology: An Introductory Textbook and Reader. London: Routledge. ISBN 9781317861737.
  6. Denby, David (15 September 2003). "Heartbreak Hotels". The New Yorker. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  7. "Dirty Pretty Things". Metacritic. CBS Interactive.
  8. "Dirty Pretty Things". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster.
  9. "Dirty Pretty Things". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 15 May 2017.

Further reading

  • Stein, Rachel (2010). "Disposable Bodies: Biocolonialism in The Constant Gardener and Dirty Pretty Things". In Willoquet-Maricondi, Paula (ed.). Framing the World: Explorations in Ecocriticism and Film. Under the Sign of Nature. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 0813930057.
  • Wolf, Clark (2009). "Commodification, Exploitation, and the Market for Transplant Organs: A Discussion of Dirty Pretty Things". In Shapshay, Sandra (ed.). Bioethics at the Movies. Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 170–185. ISBN 0801890772.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.