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Crossing Over Movie Review
Crossing Over Review
"Crossing Over" Overview

Rating: 18
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Wayne KramerProducer : Wayne Kramer, Frank Marshall
Screenwiter : Wayne Kramer
Starring : Harrison Ford,Ray Liotta,Ashley Judd,Alice Eve,Cliff Curtis,Jim Sturgess,Summer Bishil,Justin Chon,Melody Khazae,Alice Braga
Crash meets Babel in this multi-strand Los Angeles immigration
drama. The film is well-made and benefits from a very strong cast, but it's
both overly worthy and rather pushy about its perspective.
Immigration cop Max (Ford) clearly has compassion for the illegals he rounds up
with partner Hamid (Curtis), a naturalised citizen from Iran. But visa official
Cole (Liotta) is exploiting the desperation of a wannabe Aussie actress (Eve),
while her British friend (Sturgess) finds a loophole in the law. Meanwhile,
Cole's wife (Judd) is an immigration lawyer trying to help a 15-year-old
Bangladeshi girl (Bishil) picked up by the FBI on suspicion of terrorism due to
a school project. And Yong (Chon) is a Korean teen caught up with an Asian gang.
There are several other storylines, and each touches on a specific aspect of
immigration, with a range of ethnicities, visa situations and personal issues,
all of which come up against the rigid rule of law. Even harsher are FBI
tactics that throw out rights such as privacy, free speech and the presumption
of innocence, not to mention simple human decency. But then, their paranoia is
echoed by people on the streets and in the classrooms.
In other words, the film is packed with thought-provoking material; it's
vitally important simply because filmmaker Kramer is airing such complex
issues. The Bangladeshi family is the most involving story, with a lovely,
understated performance by Bishil as a girl whose whole life comes undone
because she dares to think deeply. This story could have supported the whole
film, and sometimes sits at odds with Sturgess' more comical tale, Eve and
Liotta's sordid encounters, or Curtis' increasingly disturbing journey.
The entire cast gives offhanded, natural performances that hold our interest.
Ford is good as the everyman, brushing against the various plots. Despite the
insipid Mark Isham score, there are some seriously powerful emotional scenes
along the way, although a couple of strands get lost in the shuffle,
disappearing for long stretches and only coming back to fit into the final tidy
mosaic. Ultimately, Kramer strains to make it gel together, but we still hear
his cry for understanding and compassion in a world filled with bigotry and
ignorance.
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Review by Rich Cline
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