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Dirty Pretty Things

  • 2002
  • R
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
45K
YOUR RATING
Audrey Tautou in Dirty Pretty Things (2002)
Trailer for Dirty Pretty Things
Play trailer0:36
2 Videos
53 Photos
Conspiracy ThrillerPsychological DramaPsychological ThrillerWorkplace DramaCrimeDramaThriller

Irregular migrants Okwe and Senay work at a posh London hotel and live in constant fear of deportation. One night Okwe stumbles across evidence of a bizarre murder, setting off a series of e... Read allIrregular migrants Okwe and Senay work at a posh London hotel and live in constant fear of deportation. One night Okwe stumbles across evidence of a bizarre murder, setting off a series of events that could lead to disaster or freedom.Irregular migrants Okwe and Senay work at a posh London hotel and live in constant fear of deportation. One night Okwe stumbles across evidence of a bizarre murder, setting off a series of events that could lead to disaster or freedom.

  • Director
    • Stephen Frears
  • Writer
    • Steven Knight
  • Stars
    • Chiwetel Ejiofor
    • Audrey Tautou
    • Sophie Okonedo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    45K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stephen Frears
    • Writer
      • Steven Knight
    • Stars
      • Chiwetel Ejiofor
      • Audrey Tautou
      • Sophie Okonedo
    • 234User reviews
    • 142Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 16 wins & 28 nominations total

    Videos2

    Dirty Pretty Things
    Trailer 0:36
    Dirty Pretty Things
    Dirty Pretty Things
    Trailer 0:31
    Dirty Pretty Things
    Dirty Pretty Things
    Trailer 0:31
    Dirty Pretty Things

    Photos53

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    • Okwe
    Audrey Tautou
    Audrey Tautou
    • Senay
    Sophie Okonedo
    Sophie Okonedo
    • Juliette
    Kriss Dosanjh
    Kriss Dosanjh
    • Asian Businessman
    Israel Oyelumade
    Israel Oyelumade
    • Mini Cab Driver
    • (as Israel Aduramo)
    Yemi Goodman Ajibade
    • Mini Cab Driver
    • (as Ade-Yemi Ajibade)
    Nizwar Karanj
    • Mini Cab Driver
    Deobia Oparei
    Deobia Oparei
    • Mini Cab Driver
    Jeffery Kissoon
    Jeffery Kissoon
    • Cab Controller
    Zlatko Buric
    Zlatko Buric
    • Ivan
    Sergi López
    Sergi López
    • Sneaky
    • (as Sergi Lopez)
    Benedict Wong
    Benedict Wong
    • Guo Yi
    Kenan Hudaverdi
    • Cafe Owner
    Damon Younger
    Damon Younger
    • Punter
    Paul Bhattacharjee
    Paul Bhattacharjee
    • Mohammed
    Darrell D'Silva
    Darrell D'Silva
    • Immigration Officer
    Sotigui Kouyaté
    Sotigui Kouyaté
    • Shinti
    Abi Gouhad
    • Shinti's Son
    • Director
      • Stephen Frears
    • Writer
      • Steven Knight
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews234

    7.245K
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    Featured reviews

    Philby-3

    There's lots for sale that shouldn't be

    Stephen Frears is good at growing roses in unpromising surroundings, `My Beautiful Laundrette' being a good example. Here he tells the almost uplifting tale of Okwe (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a Nigerian doctor who has become an illegal immigrant to Britain, and his chaste relationship with a young virginal Turkish woman Senay (Audrey Tautou) whose aim is to join her sister in New York, where the policemen are on white horses and good jobs can be had for the asking . At the start of the film Okwe and Senjay are both working in the Baltic, an upmarket London hotel, he as the night desk clerk and she as a maid, sharing (by rotation) a tiny flat and doing their best to avoid the immigration police. Then one night Okwe discovers that the toilet of Room 510 is blocked with a human heart, and it seems that Sneaky the night manager who unaccountably drives a new Mercedes (Sergi Lopez) is deeply involved. Unfortunately he can't very well go to the cops, and Sneaky, when he finds out about Okwe's medical skills, tries to recruit him into the racket, which, without giving the game away, involves the sale of human organs. The squeamish are advised, by the way, to avert their eyes when the scalpels come out – even properly conducted surgery can be a bloody business.

    The film is very much about the plight of immigrants, especially illegal ones, to richer countries, where they slot in to all those menial low paid jobs the citizens of those countries don't want to do. In one of the few really comic moments of the film the entire workforce of a clothing sweatshop vanish from the premises with well-practiced haste as immigration officials approach the premises. Okwe makes a little speech late in the move about he and his fellow illegals doing all that stuff you don't notice unless it's not done, like cleaning and rubbish disposal, but Frears refrains from preaching, for the most part. What he has done is to present their plight in a compassionate manner and evoked the atmosphere of fear and despair that surrounds them.

    A film like this requires good acting and Chiwetel Ejiofor, a Londoner with Nigerian parents, is excellent as Owke the doctor turned night clerk. Owke maintains his dignity and the audience's sympathy throughout. He has been to New York, in fact has worked there as a doctor, but he does not try to shatter Senay's dream of the Promised Land. Audrey Tautou is typecast as a young innocent (`Amelie' and `The Spanish Apartment') and it's not hard to see her as a Turkish virgin, but she here handles the maturing of her character very adroitly. I also liked Sergi Lopez's Sneaky, who was just nasty enough when it would have been easy to descend into caricature. Lopez certainly is versatile; he made a plausible lover in `L' Liasion Pornographique' and a very believable villain in `Harry, He's Here to Help'.

    Above all, Frears has evoked the atmosphere of the illegal immigrant sub-culture in an honest fashion. It may be that the opening up of the labour markets of Western Europe with the enlargement of the European Union will squeeze out the illegal ones – there will be fewer jobs for them, even of the most menial kind. The trade that Frears exposes may well get worse.
    JohnDeSando

    `Dirty Pretty Things' is an example of excellent filmmaking art without artifice.

    `Dirty Pretty Things' is a thriller interrupted by a love story. The immigrant Brit working class is sometimes depicted by this film's director Stephen Frears (`My Beautiful Laundrette'); the native Brits are often championed by Mike Leigh (`Secrets and Lies'). In both cases, the kitchen sink realism does not fail to wake up middle-class Anglophiles like me.

    Nigerian doctor Okwe hides in London behind 2 jobs as cabbie and night porter. He lives with, but does not sleep with, Turkish chambermaid Senay (played by `Amelie's' Audrey Tautou). Though they both hide from immigration officials, they cannot hide from their love. Okwe remains loyal to his Nigerian wife and daughter, and Senay has enough surviving to do to keep herself from Okwe.

    After he finds a human heart in a hotel room, his own heart is changed forever. He becomes aware of low-life trafficking in organs and aware that as a doctor he could relieve many pains by helping the transplant operations. When the bloody business hits home, Frears lets us suffer with Okwe while he decides if his conventional morality can adjust to the underworld's impossible demands. The decision is not easy because his boss, Sneaky (the talented Sergi Lopez from `With a Friend like Harry'), regales him with the sophistry that crime like this is good for everyone involved (for instance, a doctor performing an operation rather than letting a hack do damage).

    My worldly-wise companion and I debated Okwe's dilemma without a firm conclusion about the ethics of this end justifying the means. Frears caught us in the middle-class complacency of professionals who easily trip to London not even thinking about the workers who will attend to us--those shadow people we will never see, the disenfranchised a heartbeat away from jail or deportation. As for their love lives, who has time?

    The screenwriter, Steven Knight, created the original Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? `Dirty' is leagues away from that fantasy game show, but then again the immigrants of this film are just as much moved by the slim chance of finding a home somewhere in the world.

    It's the love story between Okwe and Senay that entrances me. I can't remember when I was so pleased by seeing the power of mutual respect turning into love and impossibility as I have been here. Of course, the consummate acting is a big help (You'll completely forget airhead Amelie when you see Tautou out of Paris and in the streets of London).

    `Dirty Pretty Things' is an example of excellent filmmaking art without artifice.
    9claudio_carvalho

    An Urban Legend About the Socially Excluded Immigrants in London

    In London, the Nigerian illegal immigrant and former doctor Okwe (Chiwetel Ejiofor) works as cab driver along the day and in the front desk of a hotel managed by Juan 'Sneaky' (Sergi López) in the graveyard shift. He shares a couch in the small flat of the Turkish illegal immigrant Senay (Audrey Tautou), who also works in the hotel as maiden. One night, the Londoner prostitute Juliette (Sophie Okonedo) asks Okwe to fix the toilet of room 510, where she 'works', and he finds a human heart obstructing it. Okwe's further investigation discloses an invisible world of traffic of human organs of illegal immigrants in London. This excellent movie has a great screenplay about the urban legend of traffic of organs of the socially excluded immigrants in London. Just as a comparison, in Brazil, thousands of children of the lower classes vanish every year. The urban legend tells that they were adopted overseas or were used in the illegal traffic of human organs, but these stories are only rumor in Internet. Therefore, this theme in an excellent script is very attractive. Stephen Frears is one of the greatest directors of the cinema history and his movies are synonym of quality. The great surprise for me was the international cast, leaded by the unknown Chiwetel Ejiofor, followed by the excellent Audrey 'Amélie Poulain' Tautou and Sergi 'Harry' López , and the also unknown Sophie Okonedo, all of them with excellent performances. 'Dirty Pretty Things' is a highly recommended film. My vote is nine.

    Title (Brazil): 'Coisas Belas e Sujas' (Pretty and Dirty Things')
    10Howlin Wolf

    You wouldn't believe how some people will degrade themselves to survive...

    ... I have to be honest and say that before I sat down to watch, I hadn't given much thought to the subject, myself. Maybe it's the suburban boy in me. Often you don't notice the true depths of depravity to be found in most cities unless you actively go looking for it.

    This happens to be about the underbelly of London; and what practises are reputed to - and may or may not - go on there. In this particular treatment, such activities are allowed to continue because the people caught up in them aren't citizens. 'Developed' society prefers to deny them a workable route of admittance for many of their circumstances;, so the best attitude seems to be to ignore how they have to live until such time as they go away. Of course, the logical outcome of such a way of thinking is a marked increase in illegal/immoral activity; but somehow the people who wish to turn a blind eye can't understand that eventually the overall effects will begin to seep onto THEIR doorstep... You do indeed tend to reap what you sow.

    For those lucky enough to be ignorant of the sorts of happenings that take place on the streets, one can only say that this film is an eye-opener. Too often we walk around blind to the foreign nationals who do a lot of our menial jobs for us. It's not expected that we take notice of our cab drivers, chamber-maids, and yes; even our sex-slaves. Pity we don't pay more attention, because that often isn't ALL they do; and the burden of truth should heap shame on civilisation as a whole. These issues are handled brilliantly in "Dirty Pretty Things" by all of the creative team involved. See it to humble yourselves with this sobering reminder: The face you slap on your way up may belong to the same owner of the feet you're kissing at your lowest ebb.
    Dubescfan

    Worth seeing

    A thoroughly engaging film which I would have no hesitation in recommending. Other reviewers have given away the major elements of the plot which may mean that you may find that it takes time to "cut to the chase" if you read the comments here before you see it. You are better off seeing this film "cold" knowing neither the plot nor the players. It does tend to get a bit goarey towards the end, but not without reason. A well written, superbly acted (especially by the two leads) and expertly directed work that makes you continue to believe that cinema can still be political and make important points without hitting you over the head with a blunt instrument. My only minor crib would be the accents which can be difficult to decipher or in Tatou's case slightly off (her character is supposed to be Turkish but the accent is more Eastern European).

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    Related interests

    Gene Hackman in The Conversation (1974)
    Conspiracy Thriller
    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Psychological Drama
    Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl (2014)
    Psychological Thriller
    Meryl Streep in The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
    Workplace Drama
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    Crime
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    Drama
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Turkish immigrant Senay also has a poster of controversial Turkish director Yilmaz Güney in her temporary apartment. Güney produced many works of 'gritty realism' devoted to the plight of ordinary, working class people in Turkey. At odds with the typical state-sanctioned films and the then Turkish government, the director eventually fled the country and later lost his citizenship.
    • Goofs
      It does not make any sense to carefully dissect a heart (including removing its pericardium) only to carelessly flush it down the toilets.
    • Quotes

      Guo Yi: You know, Okwe, good at chess usually means bad at life. You do realize that she's in love with you, don't you? I've been with her 20 minutes, and I know it. But then, I'm bad at chess...

    • Crazy credits
      The sound of a plane taking off can be heard at the very end of the credits.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 76th Annual Academy Awards (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Glass, Concrete & Stone
      Written by David Byrne

      Performed by David Byrne

      Courtesy of Nonesuch Records

      By Arrangement with Warner Strategic Marketing

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 5, 2003 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Somali
      • Spanish
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Negocios entrañables
    • Filming locations
      • 28 Southwark Street, London, England, UK(cab company)
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • Celador Films
      • Jonescompany Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $10,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $8,112,414
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $100,512
      • Jul 20, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $13,904,766
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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