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Dirty Pretty Things (2002)
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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writer:
Steven Knight (written by)
Release Date:
13 December 2002 (UK)
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Tagline:
Some things are too dangerous to keep secret. more
Plot:
An illegal Nigerian immigrant discovers the unpalatable side of London life. full summary | add synopsis
Awards:
Nominated for Oscar.
Another 16 wins
&
19 nominations
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NewsDesk:
(31 articles)
The best films of 2009
(From Roger Ebert's Blog. 21 December 2009, 9:53 PM, PST)
Machan is streets ahead of any Hollywood product
(From The Guardian - Film News. 19 November 2009, 9:23 AM, PST)
(From Roger Ebert's Blog. 21 December 2009, 9:53 PM, PST)
Machan is streets ahead of any Hollywood product
(From The Guardian - Film News. 19 November 2009, 9:23 AM, PST)
User Comments:
Casting light on aspects of society that Middle England might prefer to keep in the dark
more (180 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Chiwetel Ejiofor | ... | Okwe | |
| Kriss Dosanjh | ... | Asian Businessman | |
| Israel Aduramo | ... | Mini Cab Driver | |
| Yemi Ajibade | ... | Mini Cab Driver (as Ade-Yemi Ajibade) | |
| Nizwar Karanj | ... | Mini Cab Driver | |
| Deobia Oparei | ... | Mini Cab Driver | |
| Jeffery Kissoon | ... | Cab Controller | |
| Zlatko Buric | ... | Ivan | |
| Audrey Tautou | ... | Senay Gelik | |
| Sophie Okonedo | ... | Juliette | |
| Sergi López | ... | Sneaky / Juan | |
| Benedict Wong | ... | Guo Yi | |
| Kenan Hudaverdi | ... | Cafe Owner | |
| Damon Younger | ... | Punter | |
| Paul Bhattacharjee | ... | Mohammed |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Loin de chez eux (Canada: French title) (Switzerland: French title) [fr]
Negocios entrañables (Argentina) (Mexico) [es]
Грязные прелести (Russia) [ru]
Coisas Belas E Sujas (Brazil) [pt]
Dirty Pretty Things (Finland) [fi]
Estranhos de Passagem (Portugal) (original subtitled version) [pt]
Kirli tatli seyler (Turkey: Turkish title) [tr]
Kleine schmutzige Geschäfte (Switzerland: German title) [de]
Kleine schmutzige Tricks (Germany) [de]
Negocios ocultos (Spain) [es]
Niewidoczni (Poland) [pl]
Piccoli affari sporchi (Italy) [it]
Viata la Londra (Romania) [ro]
Vromika omorfa pragmata (Greece) [el]
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Negocios entrañables (Argentina) (Mexico) [es]
Грязные прелести (Russia) [ru]
Coisas Belas E Sujas (Brazil) [pt]
Dirty Pretty Things (Finland) [fi]
Estranhos de Passagem (Portugal) (original subtitled version) [pt]
Kirli tatli seyler (Turkey: Turkish title) [tr]
Kleine schmutzige Geschäfte (Switzerland: German title) [de]
Kleine schmutzige Tricks (Germany) [de]
Negocios ocultos (Spain) [es]
Niewidoczni (Poland) [pl]
Piccoli affari sporchi (Italy) [it]
Viata la Londra (Romania) [ro]
Vromika omorfa pragmata (Greece) [el]
more
MPAA:
Rated R for sexual content, disturbing images and language.
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
97 min
Country:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Germany:12 |
Brazil:18 |
Iceland:12 (video rating) |
Iceland:14 |
Argentina:16 |
Australia:MA |
Canada:14A |
Denmark:11 |
Finland:K-15 |
Hong Kong:IIB |
Japan:PG-12 |
Netherlands:12 |
New Zealand:R16 |
Norway:15 |
Portugal:M/16 |
Singapore:R(A) |
Spain:18 |
Sweden:11 |
Switzerland:14 (canton of Geneva) |
Switzerland:14 (canton of Vaud) |
UK:15 |
USA:R
Filming Locations:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Damien O'Donnell was originally attached to direct, but he decided to pass after problems with Harvey Weinstein. He directed Heartlands (2002) instead.
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Goofs:
Continuity: When Okwe and Senay are drinking wine, Senay lifts a full glass. In the next shot, the glass is 3/4 full.
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Quotes:
Movie Connections:
References The Conversation (1974)
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Soundtrack:
Room 510
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FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (180 total)
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There have been a number of films made in Britain about ethnic minorities; "Anita and Me", "Bhaji on the Beach", "Sour Sweet" and "Bend it Like Beckham" are all examples that come to mind. Most of these films, however, deal with those who migrated legally to Britain in the mid twentieth century and their descendants who, while retaining a distinct cultural identity of their own, have integrated into British society.
"Dirty Pretty Things" ventures into much less familiar territory, the world of asylum seekers and illegal immigrants. Although some reviewers have confused these two categories of people, they are in fact different. An asylum seeker has the right to remain in Britain while his or her case is being investigated by the authorities. An illegal immigrant has no legal right to be in Britain at all. What both groups have in common, however, is that neither are legally permitted to work, and are frequently exploited by unscrupulous employers who employ them illegally, generally in poor conditions and for less than the legal minimum wage.
The central character is Okwe, an African working as a cab driver during the day and as a hotel porter at night. In the course of the film we learn that his real name is Olesegun, that he was a doctor in Nigeria and that he was forced to flee that country as a political refugee. Okwe shares a flat with a young Turkish woman named Senay who fled her country to avoid an arranged marriage. Although Senay has fallen in love with Okwe, the relationship between them remains platonic. Like Okwe, Senay is forced to work illegally, in her case in a sweatshop garment factory, where she is not only exploited financially by her bosses but is also sexually harassed by the foreman, who is safe in the knowledge that she will not dare to report him to the authorities.
The plot has some similarities with that of medical thrillers such as "Coma" and "Extreme Measures". One night Okwe is called to attend to a blocked lavatory in a hotel room and discovers that what is causing the blockage is actually a human heart. His investigations into this discovery lead him to uncover a black-market trade in human body parts for transplant surgery and to the knowledge that his boss Juan, the hotel night manager, is involved in this traffic. Like Okwe and Senay, Juan is an immigrant, presumably from Spain or Latin America. Most of the characters in the film, in fact, are either immigrants or from minority communities; we also see a West Indian prostitute and a Chinese morgue worker. Apart from the bullying immigration officers, we see little of the native British community.
It is difficult to envisage a film like this being made in America, at least by a mainstream company. If Hollywood ever makes a film about the lives of immigrant hotel workers, it does so in the context of a glossy romantic comedy like "Maid in Manhattan". The British film industry, however, has a long tradition of social realism, a tradition that was particularly strong in the fifties and sixties, the heyday of the "kitchen sink" movie, although it has occasionally been revived since, especially during the Thatcherite era. ("My Beautiful Laundrette", another Stephen Frears film with a hero drawn from an ethnic minority, was an example from the mid-eighties).
There are two acting performances that stand out. One is from Chiwetel Ejiofor as Okwe, a modern incarnation of that classic type of thriller hero (one beloved of Alfred Hitchcock), the decent man in the wrong place at the wrong time. The other is from Sergi Lopez as the creepy, slimy Juan, a man whose nickname of "Sneaky" is well-deserved. Audrey Tautou, however, was something of a disappointment after her excellent role in "Amelie"; like a number of other actors, she seems to find it easier to act in her own language than in a foreign one.
What gives this film its power is this combination of documentary-style social realism with a gripping thriller plot. (There is a third element, the growing romance between Okwe and Senay, the British cinema being more relaxed than the American one about inter-racial romance). In the past, I have not always been Frears's greatest admirer; I found "Laundrette", for example overrated, and he has turned out some fairly standard Hollywood fare. "The Queen" was a good film, but even that was only lifted above the average by an excellent performance from Helen Mirren. "Dirty Pretty Things", however, is the best of his films that I have seen, a fine example of the honourable British tradition of casting light on those aspects of our society that Middle England might prefer to keep in the dark. 8/10