With a highly inventive
introduction to cheerfully mismatched characters, The Visitor is
a daring look at the hopelessness of unfortunate immigration circumstances.
Superbly acted and beautifully scored, the film doesn’t back
down from its touching subject matter and realistically tragic events,
but instead infuses them with aptly-timed comic relief and the persuasive
power of music and romance.
Bitter and bored college professor Walter Vale (Richard Jenkins)
travels to his New York apartment after being forced to attend
a conference on global economization. Immediately he discovers
a couple living in his home, and out of kindness and the appeal
of company, he invites them to stay. Tarek Khalil (Haaz Sleiman)
plays the drums, and soon gets the unsociable Walter to take up
the instrument. Tarek’s girlfriend Zainab is slower to acknowledge
Walter’s hospitality, but eventually warms to his presence.
When Tarek is arrested at the subway and taken to a detention
center for illegal immigrants, Walter shows estimable concern
for his newfound friend. Weighing his teaching job back in Connecticut
against helping a man he’s known for less than two weeks,
Walter hires a lawyer to aid in Tarek’s release. When Mrs.
Khalil arrives to find out what’s happened to her son, Walter
finds himself rediscovering romance as well as what is truly important
in his life.