Dirty Pretty Things (2003)
Runtime: 1 hr 47 mins
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Chjwetel Ejiofor, Audrey Tautou, Sergi Lopez, Sophie Okonedo, Zlatko Buric
Screenwriter: Steven Knight
Producer: Tracey Seaward, Robert Jones
Composer: Nathan Larson
Screenwriter: Stephen Morris
DVD Info
Release:
Mar 23, 2004
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case
Additional Release Material:
- Commentary - 1. Stephen Frears - Director
- Behind-the-Scenes
Buy It On DVD
Reviews
Here he strikes a perfect balance between social commentary and melodrama, while nudging his actors to turn potentially stereotypical figures (eg, a virginal waif, a golden-hearted whore, a philosophical Chinese) into three-dimensional people.
An intelligent and extremely well-made romantic drama that tells an intriguing story with economy and insight.
An impressive mix of entertainment and social comment, spinning a great mystery even as it confronts an ugly world.
Dirty Pretty Things benefits from the best script...hands down, written for a movie released in 2003
A sympathetic, engaging and politically astute slice of modern urban realism, set in the twilight world of London's community of recent immigrants and asylum seekers, and directed with Frears' habitual professionalism and sensitivity.
Offers a frills-free meditation on the many faces of oppression.
Weaving threads of classic thrillers through this gritty realistic context, Frears satisfies our desire for a good story.
...an incredibly entertaining picture with a first-rate ensemble cast. It seems to unwind at precisely the right pace, and its gritty look is never ostentatiously "beautiful"
Even when bad things happen to these people, one can't help but believe that things will one day get better.
The synchronicity between script, stars and cinematography falls square on the shoulders of Frears, however, and he fully realizes the potential.
When is a thriller not a thriller? When British director Stephen Frears makes it.
It’s the didactic dialogue... and the plot contrivances... that might produce snickers.
A quirky, gritty look at life in the London underworld where immigrants work crappy jobs and trade kidneys for citizenship.
Like Ejiofor’s role, Dirty Pretty Things is nonpareil; they remain in a league of their own. They also belong in a small league for 2003: that which may not be missed.
In 'Dirty Pretty Things,' filmmakers weave complex story threads into a cinematic tapestry of fear, suspense and compassion.
A film that will leave most people who actually see it feeling moderately impressed, but uneasily aware that they are not being told anything approaching the whole truth.
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Dirty Pretty Things at IGN
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