Shelter (FILM REVIEW)
Shelter
Film
Review
by Kam Williams
Plight of Homeless Highlighted in Bittersweet Romance Drama
It's
probably a hard-sell when you choose to make any film, let alone a
romance, revolving around the homeless. After all, in real life, most
of us avoid interacting with them at all costs.
Sure,
if cornered, we might give them the loose change in our pockets. But
if we're being honest, that charitable gesture is generally employed
as a way of ignoring rather than engaging a beggar in a meaningful
way.
Nevertheless,
with Shelter, actor-turned-writer/director Paul Bettany (Avengers:
Age of Ultron) has opted to shed light on the plight of the least of
our brethren. Bettany was ostensibly inspired by a couple who lived
outside his and wife Jennifer Connelly's building in New York City.
The
compelling, character-driven drama co-stars Oscar-winner
Connelly (for A Beautiful Mind) and
Anthony Mackie (The Hurt Locker), a versatile Juilliard-trained
thespian perhaps best known for his work as the superhero Falcon in
the Marvel Cinematic Universe series. Here, the pair play Hanna and
Tahir, street people struggling to survive unseen in the shadows of
Brooklyn.
Each
is down-and-out as the result of a terrible turn of events. Hanna is
a widow who developed a heroin habit in the wake of the death of her
husband serving in Iraq. And Tahir is an African immigrant desperate
for sanctuary in the U.S. who overstayed his visa to escape the
violence back in his homeland.
As
the film unfolds, the two are complete strangers. Their paths cross
in Brooklyn where a friendship is forged based as much on a grudging
on trust as on the urgent, mutual need for safety, food and shelter.
Meanwhile,
they also find the time exchange life stories, leaning on each
other's shoulders for the empathy they could never hope to get from a
world that no longer cares. Eventually, love blossoms, and together
they hatch a plan to rejoin respectable society together.
It
would be unfair to spoil further any of the details of this poignant
portrait painting a plausible picture of where any of us might be,
but for fortune. While
it's no surprise that Connelly and Mackie might turn in powerful
performances, a salute is also in order for Bettany for an
impressive, timely and daring directorial debut guaranteed
to
shake you out of your comfort zone.
Excellent (4
stars)
Unrated
Running time: 105 minutes
Distributor: Screen Media Films
To see a trailer for Shelter,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QWudLnDyZw
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