What people can do when pressed is amazing. In 2015, the Hadhad family from Syria, by way of a refugee camp in Lebanon, arrived in Antigonish, Nova Scotia to reboot their lives. The 50-something father Issam (Hatem Ali) was a chocolate maker and factory owner; 20-something son Tarek (a strinkingly handsome Ayham Abou Ammar) was training in family medicine and would like to restart that in Canada, if he can. Those two form the lead roles and the primary story of a year in rebuilding their family's life.
It's a true story, and there's a book about them that I haven't read, so I am not sure just how much of the movie takes liberties with actual events or over-dramatizes them. But it's an expertly paced and edited piece of work, so lots of credit to director Jonathan Keijser and his team for that. If there's any big gap here, it's probably the lack of screen time given to the women of the family, particularly Tareq's mother.
Seven years later the Hadhads have a very well known chocolate factory that ships everywhere (we've ordered some of their products, and yes they are good!) As Tareq has said, they are among the lucky ones. For a story centering on the modern refugee experience that is equally universal and cuts a little harder and deeper, see 'Flee'. But they're both good.