Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Review: A compassion­ate immigrant drama in ‘Tori and Lokita’

- By JAKE COYLE

It’s one of the great ironies of cinema that many — not all, but many — of the most seemingly arthouse filmmakers make some of the most approachab­le films.

Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne are imposing names in cinema. The Belgian brothers have twice won the Palme d’Or. But you would be hard pressed to find many filmmakers who have beaten a more humanistic path, trailing working-class protagonis­ts with handheld cameras and deep wells of empathy. They’ve stuck resolutely near home, shooting in and around their native Seraing, often with unprofessi­onal actors. Yet they’ve found global acclaim for their humble, neorealist­ic masterwork­s.

It’s been nearly a decade, though, since the Dardennes made a real impression. But in “Tori and Lokita,” a heartwrenc­hing immigrant drama that opens in theaters Friday, they make a thrilling return to form.

(Pablo Schils) and 16-year-old Lokita (Joely Mbundu), two African immigrants living in an unnamed Belgian city. Only Tori has the necessary papers to stay, and immigratio­n authoritie­s are pressing Lokita. We’re plunged directly into her desperate situation, as she pleads to stone-faced bureaucrat­s that she and Tori and siblings. If proven

— Lokita could stay. But their story isn’t convincing.

So tender is the connection between Tori and Lokita that you wonder initially if they are, in fact, brother and sister. But their bond is something more profound than blood, a product of shared circumstan­ce and mutual perseveran­ce. How they have gotten to Europe from Benin and Cameroon

is never specified but it’s clear enough that they’ve been hardened by journeys that were solitary before they became intertwine­d. Lokita is still aggressive­ly hounded for regular payments by the man who helped her flee. She sends home everything else to a family skeptical of how hard she’s working.

Yet Lokita’s doing everything she can, including delivering drugs for a backroom-dealing chef Betim (Alban Ukaj). He rarely misses a chance to take advantage of Lokita’s situation. Tori is there alongside her through nearly it all, sticking up for her to Betim, requesting their pay and soothing Lokita when she’s been abused. “You’re sweet, Tori,” she says. “There’s no one like you.”

The Dardennes’ movie, a prize-winner at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, resides overwhelmi­ngly in their relationsh­ip, portrayed affectiona­tely and unsentimen­tally by Mbundu and Schils. Tori and Lokita are welded together, a small but stubborn bulwark against a predatory world. When Lokita takes a job that separates them, the lengths to which Tori goes to reunite them is cleverly ingenious, deeply dangerous and one of the more moving things you’re likely to see in a movie this year.

The Dardennes are at their best when their crushing contempora­ry worlds are navigated by young characters of gritty courage: the trailer-park teenager of “Rosetta,” the abandoned boy of “The Kid With a Bike.” “Tori and Lokita” also at point features another kid on a bike, making his way against the odds. It may be the abiding symbol of the directors’ films: In this world, survival is self-propelled. Their taut and straightfo­rward films can be heartbreak­ing — and “Tori and Lokita,” which grows increasing­ly, almost unbearable tense is no exception. But in the bleak, everyday struggles the Dardennes dramatize, they are always, thank god, keenly on the lookout for grace.

 ?? — a DNA test is threatened ?? It’s about 11-year-old Tori This image released by Sideshow and Janus Films shows Pablo Schils, right, and Joely Mbundu in a scene from “Tori and Lokita.” (Sideshow and Janus Films via AP)
— a DNA test is threatened It’s about 11-year-old Tori This image released by Sideshow and Janus Films shows Pablo Schils, right, and Joely Mbundu in a scene from “Tori and Lokita.” (Sideshow and Janus Films via AP)

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