Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. As the story unfolds, Walter forms an unexpected bond with the couple, whose lives are disrupted when Tarek is wrongfully arrested and detained by immigration authorities. The ending of The Visitor can be interpreted in various ways, but here is one possible explanation:

  2. Apr 11, 2008 · 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. This urban, multicultural idyll is shattered when...

    • Tom Mccarthy
  3. One day Walter is walking through Washington Square Park and hears two young black boys drumming on the bottoms of plastic buckets. He stops to listen. After awhile his head begins to move side to side, half an inch at a time, in response to the rhythm.

  4. Upon arriving at the apartment he keeps in the city, he finds it inhabited by Tarek (Haaz Sleiman), an immigrant from Syria, and his girlfriend Zainab (Danai Gurira), from Senegal. Rather than throw them out or call the police, Walter invites them to stay with him for the time being.

  5. Hesitating, she accepts Walter's offer to stay in the apartment, and the two develop a friendship. Walter confesses his life is unfulfilling; he dislikes the single course he has taught for twenty years, and the book he is allegedly writing is nowhere near completion.

  6. A touching and impressive film that depicts the way a professor's closed-off heart is opened by music, friendship, and love. Sixty-two-year-old Walter Vale (Richard Jenkins) is a professor of economics at a Connecticut college.

  7. People also ask

  8. The Visitor is characterized with a couple of themes. The thematic scope touches social-cultural awakening, racism, homelessness etc, and has a notable bias on immigration. Walter learns to be social-culturally flexible as he interacts with his housemate and learns from him.

  1. People also search for