Dirty Pretty Things
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 8 August 2003
Working
stiffs
"My
bloomin' feet! I'm lucky I don't work standing up." Laughing as
she makes her way through the hotel foyer, Juliette (Sophie Okonedo)
waves goodnight to Okwe (Chiwetel Ejiofor), the desk clerk. Their
brief exchange takes mere seconds, but their eyes -- weary, knowing
-- convey a deeply felt, shared experience. Immigrants struggling to
live in London, they're night people, toiling when most everyone
else, save for Juliette's clients, is sleeping.
On
its first level, then, Dirty Pretty Things is a film about
beaten-down, exhausted, tenaciously hopeful workers, lonely and
dogged characters who
labor at jobs that more privileged citizens wouldn't think of doing.
Okwe once had another life: he was a doctor in Nigeria, forced into
exile ("It is an African story," he says by way of
explanation); now he watches the hotel desk at night, drives a cab
during the day, and when pressed by fellow immigrants, provides
minor medical care (say, treating his taxi dispatcher for the clap).
Okwe
spends his few off hours playing chess with his morgue-attendant
friend Guo Yi (Benedict Wong), or napping fitfully on a couch in a
flat rented by Senay (Audrey Tautou), a maid at the hotel. She has
her own backstory, having fled an arranged Muslim marriage back in
Turkey. Protective of her privacy (and her virginity) and
appreciative of Okwe's gentle chivalry, she's in England on a
temporary visa, which means she works illegally and lives in fear
that she'll be discovered.
And
so, the film reveals its other levels, as it considers not only
class disparities and the difficulties of poverty, but also the ways
that self-interest or survival shapes actions. While director
Stephen Frears has explored the plights of immigrants previously --
in My Beautiful Laundrette (1985) and Sammy and Rosie Get
Laid (1987) -- Steve Knight's script takes a particularly edgy,
even surrealish tack, aided considerably by Chris Menges's skritchy,
smart cinematography, darting in and out of corners, revealing bits
of street life and indicating emotional nuance.
All
the urban immigrants in Dirty Pretty Things live
hand-to-mouth, each day a test of patience, resilience, and, to some
degree, moral fiber. Perhaps the most extravagant embodiment of this
"test" is the hotel's day manager, Señor Juan, also known
as Sneaky (Sergi López). Crude and unscrupulous, he's organized a
black market in human organs (mostly kidneys), wherein he arranges
visas, passports, and payments for people desperate to begin new
lives elsewhere. He also sets up the surgeries, late at night in the
hotel, often botched; when Sneaky accidentally learns that Okwe is a
capable doctor, he tries to enlist his services, applying whatever
underhanded pressures he can muster.
Sneaky
-- who is distressingly smart, if cynical -- sees his own needs as
primary as well as representative. When Okwe resists the illegal
activities, he explains the necessary cunning of their charge as
hotel workers: "The hotel business," he says, "is a
business of strangers. Strangers always surprise you. They come to
the hotel at night to do dirty things; it's our job in the morning
to make it all look pretty again." Okwe surely understands this
structure, this set of classed-raced-gendered distinctions between
haves and have-nots, describing himself and his coworkers as
"the people you never see," those laborers who drive, wait
on, and clean up after the folks with money.
Illuminating
the travails of the underclass isn't news, but in Dirty Pretty
Things, the focus is specific and increasingly absorbing. In
part, this is a function of the uniformly excellent performances,
but it also has to do with the details that define the characters,
in particular, Okwe's quiet friendship with Guo Yi, his gentle
efforts to protect Senay, and his complicated negotiations with
Sneaky. While Okwe embodies a recognizable integrity, he's also
forced to do work that he loathes.
At
the same time, Senay reflects a familiar, if resilient,
victimization, providing the film with a simplified emotional
trajectory, even amid all its complexities of moral and political
decisions. When a couple of immigration officers get wind of Senay
at the hotel, she seeks employment elsewhere, a sweatshop where
she's forced to service the skeezy proprietor sexually, when he
threatens to turn her in ("I just want you to help me to
relax," he mutters). Increasingly desperate, she dreams of the
good life she's heard about in New York City and begins to fall in
love with Okwe. It's easy to see how she might do either, but what's
most compelling is the disorder and confusion of her relationship
with Okwe, as he proves too intricate and compromised a character to
fit into a conventional resolution.
The
film's title, then, refers to many "things," most
simultaneously dirty and pretty. Not the least of these are the
steps of daily existence, the endless cycles of scraping along to
make rent or look after relatives. Entwined in these cycles are the
bodies that are always at stake. Selling and buying, using and
abusing bodies -- in parts, in sex acts, in wretched and depressing
labor -- is the basis of capitalism. Most effectively, of course,
bodies here are full of secrets and significance. As Juliette and
Senay are paid for them, as Guo Yi and Okwe discuss their meanings,
as Sneaky sells them (or pieces of them), bodies are deemed
property, objects of trade, and perhaps, means to freedom.
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Directed
by:
Stephen Frears
Starring:
Chiwetel Ejiofor
Audrey Tautou
Sergi López
Sophie Okonedo
Written
by:
Steve Knight
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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