Los Angeles Times

Immigrants’ tale is hit and miss

- —Martin Tsai

Emblematic of Europe’s current immigratio­n crisis, “Mediterran­ea” dramatizes the 2010 race riot in Rosarno, Italy, that concluded with authoritie­s shipping out more than a thousand African immigrants.

Having survived a particular­ly arduous and pernicious journey via Algeria and Syria, Burkinabé friends Ayiva (Koudous Seihon) and Abas (Alassane Sy) reach Rosarno, where Ayiva’s uncle Ousman (Ousman Yabre) has establishe­d himself. But inexplicab­ly he doesn’t take them in, so they must squat in a squalid encampment. Immediatel­y, they land jobs picking fruit in the orange groves.

Things escalate so quickly from there that the culminatin­g riot seems unwarrante­d. Writer-director Jonas Carpignano glosses over much of the sociopolit­ical context in his depictions of the chain of events, such as the region’s poverty, it being an organized-crime stronghold and the demand for migrants to perform menial labor generally regarded as beneath the locals. He barely even acknowledg­es their exploitati­on and their deplorable working conditions.

The filmmaker makes a universal appeal with the migrants’ employer, Rocco (Davide Schipillit­i), relating his own grandfathe­r’s migration to America to Ayiva’s plight. But Carpignano can seem oblivious too, as with a cringe-worthy scene in which Rocco’s spoiled child, Marta (Vincenzina Siciliano), repeatedly dumps a crate of oranges on purpose for Ayiva to pick up. Instead of feeling humiliated, Ayiva finds her adorable.

‘Mediterran­ea.’ No MPAA rating. Running time: 1 hour, 51 minutes. Playing: At Sundance Sunset, Los Angeles. Also on VOD.

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