Dirty Pretty Things
Dirty Pretty Things Chiwetel Ejiofor and Audrey Tautou are illegal immigrants in constant fear of being caught.

  FILM FACTS
Starring: Chiwetel Ejiofor and Audrey Tautou
Director: Stephen Frears
Rating: R for sexuality, language, violence and brief nudity
Genre: Drama, Foreign

Rate "Dirty Pretty Things":
 Good 89% 62
 Bad 10% 7
 Wait to rent 1% 1
Total Votes   70

Discuss this film | Official movie site

See showtimes   (R) 97 minutes

Grade: B-

Verdict: Part entertaining thriller, part earnest social study.

By ELEANOR RINGEL GILLESPIE
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Things get pretty dirty in Stephen Frears' "Dirty Pretty Things." The film is set in London, but you barely know it. That's because the London of "Dirty Pretty Things" is one most of us never see: a subterranean world of illegal immigrants who drive your cab or clean your hotel room.

Okwe (a commanding and heroic Chiwetel Ejiofor) was a surgeon in his native Nigeria. Now he works two jobs: a taxi driver by day, a desk clerk at the Baltic Hotel by night. His "home" is a rented couch in a tiny room belonging to another illegal, a young Turkish woman named Senay (Audrey Tautou, good, but unable to shake her Euro-waif image).

Like all illegals, they live in constant fear of the immigration service. They must not protest or make any trouble, no matter how unfairly they're treated.

The movie takes a bizarre, Michael Crichton-ish turn when Okwe is summoned to fix a toilet in one of the rooms. The obstruction is a shocker -- a human heart. Sneaky (Sergi Lopez), the aptly named and thoroughly nasty hotel manager, is a little too unfazed by a body organ in his plumbing, so Okwe turns amateur sleuth, trying to figure out what Sneaky is up to. Anyone who's ever seen the midnight cult classic "Blood Salvage" (filmed in Georgia) might already have an idea.

At its best, the movie may remind you of a Hitchcock thriller filtered through the social consciousness of Ken Loach. However, before his better-known films like "The Grifters" and "High Fidelity," Frears made his share of underclass-themed movies, too, including "My Beautiful Laundrette" and "Sammie and Rosie Get Laid."

Frears sketches these lower depths with telling detail. For instance, we learn Okwe's cab license is both illegal and shared when he hands it over to the next driver, reminding him, "Remember, your name is Mohammed."

Okwe can't catch a break no matter what he does. His decency means nothing in a system that itself means nothing. A little less saintliness and a little more complexity would've deepened the character. But then again, the script is a first-time effort by Stephen Knight, creator of the original "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" (hmmm, that may explain why Senay so desperately needs a lifeline). Still, the thriller elements keep the movie rolling; game-show people tend to know a lot about pace.

Sneaky explains the title in one of his few non-lies: "The hotel business is about strangers. They come in the night to do dirty things. In the morning, it's our job to make them pretty again."

But as this movie shows, not everything can be prettied up as easily as a hotel room. "Dirty Pretty Things" is about the things -- and the people -- lurking under the radar. Half love story, half horror story, it's like an urban legend with a conscience.

Inside AJC.COM

Year in Review

Remembering Skip Caray, Bernie Mac, Isaac Hayes and those who passed away.

Atlanta Falcons

Can the surprising team make the playoffs? Here's what has to happen around the league.

Cookie of the day

We're rolling out a baker's dozen of holiday cookies. Get ready for a treat!

National Travel

Three ways to see Palm Springs: On a budget, moderate or splurge!

Top Music Downloads

iTunes' 2008 top-selling single. It is Rihanna, Coldplay, Lil' Wayne or Leona Lewis?

Atlanta Holiday Guide

More than 10 perfect dresses for the holiday parties you're attending this month.

Atlanta's Favorite Recipes

Here are 12 of the most clicked-on recipes by ajc.com readers, including baked ziti.

Private Quarters - Splurge

Former Braves catcher Javy Lopez and his wife Gina show us their Suwanee home.

Best of the Big A

See who's voted Best Liquor Store in Metro Atlanta. Plus nominate best drive-time DJ.

Kudzu.com services Find the right people for the job

Keyword     Business Name