Jenkins’s posture, his balked smile, the occasional fidget of his hands or pause in his stride all of these almost subliminally communicate something about who Walter is, so that by the end of the film we feel we know him very well. How does he do it? Great acting is always, almost by definition, something of a mystery, a blend of technique and instinct for which no identifiable formula exists. Jenkins manages at once to deflect and to earn the audience’s sympathy, and to convey an inner transformation brought about by a shy, unselfish engagement with other people. And yet the film’s title refers to him a transient presence in his own life as much as it does to Tarek, who seems at home wherever he is. He, after all, leads a life of privilege and entitlement, and is unlikely ever to be faced with homelessness, exile or deportation. Walter himself, at his best, might insist that the story is not really about him. Jenkins, who must still make this man interesting enough, vivid enough, to carry the film’s dramatic burden. Walter is fundamentally diffident, decent and disinclined to call attention to himself, traits that pose an obvious challenge to Mr. Jenkins keeps the outburst within the boundaries of his shy, professorial temperament. Walter loses his composure only once, and even then Mr. Jenkins, a durable character actor known to HBO subscribers as the spectral father on “Six Feet Under,” plays his repressed, circumspect character with exquisite tact. McCarthy scrupulously avoids big moments and telegraphed emotions, and Mr. An actor himself (he recently played Scott Templeton, the journalistic rat on “The Wire”), Mr. McCarthy’s direction and, even more, by the quiet precision of Mr. Long-term houseguests, however appealing and exotic, would surely test the patience of even the saintliest economist, to say nothing of an evident curmudgeon like Walter.īut these objections are, for the most part, dissolved by the clarity and simplicity of Mr. Tarek’s friendliness is too emphatic, and the blossoming of his friendship with Walter proceeds a little too quickly and smoothly to be entirely credible. Much as “The Station Agent” nimbly evaded the obstacles of cuteness and willful eccentricity it had strewn in its own path, so does “The Visitor,” with impressive grace and understatement, resist potential triteness and phony uplift.Ī few false notes remain. Indeed, it’s nearly impossible to imagine it any other way.Īnd yet, astonishingly enough, Mr. It is possible to imagine a version of this story the tale of a square, middle-aged white man liberated from his uptightness by an infusion of Third World soulfulness, attached to an exposé of the cruelty of post-9/11 immigration policies that would be obvious and sentimental, an exercise in cultural condescension and liberal masochism. McCarthy’s film as I have is to acknowledge some of the risks he has taken. Walter takes up drumming, and begins to feel his zest for life and his appreciation of New York returning after a long period of dormancy. Tarek and Walter quickly become friends, though Zainab is more reserved and also clearly more suspicious of her new housemate and benefactor. The curious thing about “The Visitor” is that even as it goes more or less where you think it will, it still manages to surprise you along the way. Walter’s initial dismay and irritation gives way to an instinctive flicker of compassion, and he invites the couple to stay, at least for a short while. And sure enough, when he reluctantly travels to New York to deliver a paper at a conference, Walter finds that the Manhattan apartment he keeps but rarely visits has been surreptitiously rented to Tarek (Haaz Sleiman), a drummer from Syria, and Zainab (Danai Gurira), his Senegalese girlfriend, who sells handmade jewelry at flea markets. He recycles old syllabuses and lecture notes for his classes, and suffers through piano lessons in a half-hearted effort to sustain some kind of connection to his wife, who was a classical concert pianist.Įarly in “The Visitor,” Tom McCarthy’s second film as writer and director (the first was “The Station Agent”), it seems inevitable that something will come along to shake Walter out of his malaise. He does not seem acutely unhappy, but then again, he doesn’t seem to feel much at all, locking whatever inner life he might have behind an aloof, unfailingly polite demeanor and keeping a glass of red wine handy in case further anesthesia should prove necessary.Ī professor of economics at Connecticut College and a widower, Walter plods through an existence that looks comfortable and easy enough, but also profoundly tedious. When we first meet Walter Vale (Richard Jenkins), he is in a state of emotional inertia that clinicians might identify as depression.