Thursday, March 25, 2010

Welcome

by James McNally on March 25, 2010

in DVD

Welcome

Welcome (Director: Philippe Lioret): The title of Philippe Lioret’s latest film drips with irony. The French coastal town of Calais, where the film is set, resembles a fas­cist police state, at least when it comes to illegal immig­rants and anyone who tries to help them. We meet 17-year-old Bilal, an Iraqi Kurd, just as he arrives in Calais, after a har­rowing three-month journey from Iraq. He’s des­perate to get to London to be reunited with his girl­friend Mina, who obtained legal immig­ra­tion status a few months earlier. Calais is a gath­ering point for hun­dreds of illegals trying to get to England, and the police are ruth­less in har­assing and turning them back.

Bilal first attempts to cross by paying a “handler” 500 Euros to be smuggled over in the back of a cargo truck, but he is caught and turned back. Soon he is splashing around awk­wardly in the local pool, where ex-champion Simon (Vincent Lindon) is a coach. Bilal uses some of his remaining cash to pay Simon for swim­ming les­sons, and it soon becomes clear to the older man that his young stu­dent is plan­ning an auda­cious swim across the English Channel. Seeing a chance to impress his estranged wife, who volun­teers at a soup kit­chen for illegal immig­rants, he takes the boy into his home and begins training him more ser­i­ously. His own swim­ming career and his mar­riage are in ruins, but Bilal awakens his idealism and his paternal instincts. Unfortunately, his snooping neigh­bour dis­ap­proves and calls the police, who prac­tic­ally break Simon’s door down looking for any­thing suspicious.

This gives the film the fla­vour of a thriller even as it func­tions more like a melo­drama. The mournful piano score isn’t really neces­sary when the story and char­ac­ters are this sym­path­etic. Lindon is an actor with just the right look, his sad and expressive eyes always com­mu­nic­ating more than his gruff exchanges with Bilal, mostly in English, both char­ac­ters’ second lan­guage. Firat Ayverdi, who plays Bilal, does a con­vin­cing job of devel­oping from a beginner in the water to a strong swimmer, although his dra­matic arc is less ambitious.

Though I often wondered why the police didn’t just look the other way (it would get the migrants out of France, after all), or why Simon didn’t just smuggle Bilal to London him­self in his car, the film does a great job of con­veying the plight of refugees in Europe, who are not wel­come but who are also for­bidden to leave. The unfair reality is that some of them make it where they want to go, and many of them don’t. More shocking than that, though, was seeing the atmo­sphere of para­noia, fear and mis­trust that has seeped into the formerly lib­eral cul­ture of Europe. Though many of the aspects of the film felt melo­dra­matic, the hor­ri­fying reality of people being pro­sec­uted for such human­it­arian acts as feeding or shel­tering refugees cannot be denied.

Welcome was released on DVD in Canada by E1 Entertainment on March 2. Buy it from Amazon.ca. Extra fea­tures include a 25-minute making-of fea­tur­ette that, alas, is only in French.

US cus­tomers can buy Welcome from Film Movement. Extras include the short film The Berlin Wall.

8/10(8/10)

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