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The Visitor [Blu-ray]

The Visitor [Blu-ray]

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Director: Tom Mccarthy
Actors: Michael Cumpsty, Richard Jenkins, Haaz Sleiman, Hiam Abbass
Studio: ANCHOR BAY
Category: DVD

List Price: $39.98
Buy New: $18.09
You Save: $21.89 (55%)



New (28) Used (7) from $17.75

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 75 reviews
Sales Rank: 21536

Format: Color, Dolby, Widescreen
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: Blu-ray
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 104
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 5.3 x 0.5

MPN: ANBBRN3045
UPC: 013138304582
EAN: 0013138304582
ASIN: B001C0NMUC

Theatrical Release Date: 2007
Release Date: October 7, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Starz/sphe Release Date: 10/07/2008 Run time: 108 minutes Rating: Pg13

Amazon.com
A deeply moving drama built around longtime character actor Richard Jenkins, The Visitor is a simmering drama about a college professor and recent widower, Walter Vale (Jenkins), who discovers a pair of homeless, illegal aliens living in his New York apartment. After the mix-up is resolved, Vale invites the couple--a young, Syrian musician named Tarek (Haaz Sleiman) and his Senegalese girlfriend (Danai Gurira--to stay with him. An unlikely friendship develops between the retiring, quiet Vale and the vital Tarek, and the former begins to loosen up and respond to Tarek's drumming lessons as if something in him waiting to be liberated has finally arrived. All goes well until Tarek is hauled in by immigration authorities and threatened with deportation. His mother, Mouna (Hiam Abbass), turns up and stays with Vale, sparking a renewed if subdued interest in courtship. But the wheels of injustice in immigration crush all manner of hopes in post-9/11 America. Vale soon realizes his unexpected capacity for anger over Tarek's plight, and the positive changes to his personal life that emerged from a deep involvement with his friend and Mouna, might be the only legacy he takes from this experience. Writer-director Thomas McCarthy has created a wonderfully measured story about change and renewal, and put it all on the shoulders of Jenkins, a largely unheralded but masterful performer whose time for renown has surely come. --Tom Keogh

Stills from The Visitor (click for larger image)







Beyond The Visitor


On DVD

Soundtrack CD

Also directed by Tom McCarthy




Customer Reviews:   Read 70 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Small Movie with a Big Heart   November 20, 2008
This is one of those small movies that gives you that feel good feeling. Richard Jenkins is a man that stumbles onto some immigrants that change his life. This is a film that will definitely make you feel good.


4 out of 5 stars Finding one's purpose in life   November 20, 2008
Jaded university professor moves through his life like a shadow. He goes to work, grades student papers, spends endless hours in meaningless administrative meetings. At home he lives a lonely life eating his dinner alone and spending time taking piano lessons. One day, on his way to the academic conference in NYC, he discovers in his NYC appartment a young immigrant couple. They have "rented" his appartment not realizing that they were scammed. Young man is a musician from Syria and his Senegali girlfriend is an artist making jewelry and selling it on the streets of NYC. Unexpectedly, the friendship develops that leads to the tragic set of events. I do not wish to disclose more, you should really see the movie without me giving up a plot. But the most important part of the film is that at the end of it all, this middle aged professor at the leave of absence, learns how to play an african drum and does so in the NYC subway station. The instrument is his meditation on life, loss and grief and hope found in the unexpected places and amongst unexpected people. We can all find our purpose no matter how big or small, in this world - it is only a matter of chance.


4 out of 5 stars A good art house movie, but not for repeated viewing   November 19, 2008
There are two kinds of good movies: the kind you want to watch multiple times, and the kind that you will be glad that you saw once. For me, this is the latter type. The movie functions in two ways. First, it is a political statement about immigration policy. The main plot of the movie involves a good person who is well-integrated into American society after having lived here for many years. However, his family over-stayed a visa without responding to a legal notice many years earlier. Moreover, he is Middle Eastern, which introduces a variety of modern political issues. He is detained by the police by mistake, arrested and deported to a country he hasn't seen since he was a child, and where he knows nobody. If you support open borders, you will cheer the criticism of a Kafkaesque legal system that makes a mockery of the inscription on the Statue of Liberty. If you support restrictive immigration policy, you will be offended by a sympathetic portrayal of someone who is actually a criminal.

However, the film works on another level as well. While the story centers around immigration policy, it is told from the perspective of an Economics professor whose life becomes entangled with the deported Middle Easterner. More than anything, the movie is a character study of that professor, who goes convincingly from being a rather pathetic and self-involved person to someone who actually starts to care about other people and finds some joy in his own life through African drumming. Yes, an Econ. professor becomes obsessed with African drumming. It is rather amusing how seriously the movie takes this given the conceptual absurdity (if you know any Econ. professors personally). However, the movie does make you care about a man who seems completely unsympathetic at the beginning of the movie.

While this is a very good movie, it is not the type that lends itself to repeated viewing. The kinds of movies I can watch multiple times are either visually interesting, or have great dialogue. There is little of visual interest here (aside from the absurdity of a middle-aged Econ. professor in a drum circle), and the dialogue, while realistic, is not engrossing for its own sake. If you can watch subtle character studies over and over again, you might find this one appropriate for repeated viewing, but most of the art house movie crowd will appreciate seeing this once and only once.



5 out of 5 stars Finding friends in unlikely places.   November 18, 2008
I was eager to see this movie. It was written and directed by the man who both wrote and directed a movie that I really enjoy: The Station Agent. Both movies feature a theme of a solitary man finding friends in the least likely of circumstances.

Richard Jenkins plays the protagonist in The Visitor and, while it is not the most dynamic role, he was great. It was not his performance, however, that should get you to see this movie. Haaz Sleiman may be a one-hit wonder, but I hope not. He is Tarek, the illegal immigrant that Jenkins's character finds living in his apartment in New York City. He is tremendously charismatic.

This is not the fastest-paced movie. Please be patient, this movie is worth your time.



4 out of 5 stars In a World of Six Billion People, it Only Takes One to Change Your Life   November 18, 2008
At the start of The Visitor, Richard Jenkins (Cheaper by the Dozen) is your typical burned out professor who just white outs the term and year on the syllabus, and only if he remembers. Criticism isn't his strong suit either as he has been through five piano teachers without a second lesson. Just your typical mid life crisis, but about ten years after he should have grown out of it.

All that changes when he has to go to a conference in New York City and a couple has taken up residence in his apartment there in his absence. Instead of calling the police like a normal person, Jenkins, longing for some human contact out of the norm and let the two Muslims stay. In Haaz Sleiman (American Dreamz), Jenkins finds a teacher that doesn't just dismiss him learning the djembe (a Syrian drum) at such an old age.

This first half of the film is as exhilarating as Jenkins taking up the foreign instrument with plenty of great music that moves the movie along. But not surprising considering the origins of the house guests, the second half delves into a heavy handed commentary on the immigration policies in a post-9/11 world. Even during the first half, you know it is coming, but you wish they would have just stayed with the uplifting story of bring people together with music.




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