The Charmer (2017) Poster

(2017)

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6/10
Intriguing But Has Its Issues
larrys33 May 2019
This movie, set in Denmark, by Iranian director Milad Alami who is making his feature film debut opens with a quite shocking scene. It had enough intrigue and mystery to keep me guessing to the end. But I felt it was somewhat marred by jumping, at times, from one scene to another without explanation, as well as an overabundance of explicit lovemaking scenes which become tedious. The acting is first rate, and Alami's capturing of the feel of the Iranian community in Denmark is perfection.

Overall, this is a movie that kept me engaged till its conclusion, but unfortunately as mentioned, it does get somewhat disjointed.
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7/10
EUFF Review: The Charmer (7 Stars)
nairtejas23 September 2019
I love movies about poverty and Charmoren (The Charmer) nails it when it characterizes its main character - an Iraqi migrant living in Denmark - who is just going by through odd movers and other petty jobs. He is supposed to find a Danish wife in less than two months or else he will be deported, and so begins a funny yet a sad journey with pubs and night bars and parties where the aim is one and only one: find a bachelorette and get her to marry him. Charmoren starts as a sweet film and then just goes heavy on you as the climax unveils itself. The best part is neither the comedy or the desperation that is so beautifully acted out by main guy Ardalan Esmaili but when you get what his character does what he does at the end. It just makes the film so much more powerful and compelling in its art and message. One of the best films I saw at EUFF 2019. TN.

(Watched and reviewed at the 24th European Union Film Festival (EUFF India) in Mumbai.)
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10/10
Iranian laborer sells himself to settle in Denmark
maurice_yacowar10 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The Charmer is a poignant contribution to the European - indeed, Western - debate on the management of immigration. There are regulations, of course, but there are also basic human needs and aspirations those regulations should be humane enough to accommodate. Iranian director Milad Alami worked with a Danish co-scriptwriter to detail the damage political systems do to normal human relationships, to reasonable needs and desires. Hero Esmail is a charming Iranian man who has come to Denmark in hopes of establishing residency. By day he works as a casual labourer with a moving company. He lives in a cheap tenement so he can send money back to his family. A familiar story. He earns his (i.e., the film's) title at night when he trawls the bar scene, picking up one-night stands that he hopes will quickly convert to the formal co-habitation that will satisfy the Danish government and secure his visitors' status. He's in one when we meet him, but he moved ("fell in love") too fast for the woman's comfort so she dumps him. The opening scene is mysterious - a blonde woman's suicide. We eventually learn she left her husband for Esmail. When he wouldn't marry her she went back to him. After having sex with him she jumped out the window. As Esmail learns from Lars, the stranger who joins him in the nightly hunt, his exoticism gives him an advantage over the Danish men. Lars's function is to remind the charmer that his actions are not free from consequences. He also imputes to Esmail his unfair advantage in the sexual arena. The script carefully frames out his and his family's religion and any subversive political intentions. He simply wants to get his family a better life. That urge and innocence - and the specious terror it encounters - make this film equally pertinent to the theatre around America's Southern border. Now the spoiler: Lars is the suicide's husband, embittered by his loss to what appears to be an unscrupulous exploiter of women. Also, Esmail can't marry anyone in Denmark because he has a wife and two daughters in Iran, whom he hopes to resettle in Denmark once he establishes himself. The rigours of the immigration rules makes him use whatever he can to gain residency. The "charmer" might have been titled the "male prostitute." Typical embarrassments occur, like neither party being able to bring the date home or a woman's young son interrupting the act thinking Daddy's home. The run of coarse love never did smooth true. Before we learn Esmail's marital status we're rooting for his success with the spirited, Westernized, modern Sarah, an Iranian girl studying - unwillingly, "law" - in Denmark. She lives opulently with her mother in the Iranian expatriate community. When that community meet Esmail they reminisce glowingly about the country they fled - and sniff around for signs of his social status. Could he be Afhgani? Sarah immediately twigs to Esmail's predicament. "Don't hit on my friends." Later, when she is falling for him: "I won't marry you just so you can stay here." But when she decides to marry him it's for her own escape - from her famous mother - and the all-seeing all-judging portrait of her General father, who - whether living or dead - enabled their comfortable transplant. In the perverse morality of government regulation of lives, Esmail is doomed when he falls in love with Sarah. "This is not how it was supposed to work." He can't just live with her and he can't marry her so he returns home. He has open emotional reunions with his daughters and father-in-law. But there's an apparently new abyss between him and his wife, who stands apart. "Will you still be my husband?" "If you let me." The modesty in his response bears the hint of confession, regret, tentativeness, enough to cloud her eyes. To recover his life here he will need more than the charm that took him so far - yet nowhere - in Europe. The character's name obviously draws on two literary references. Ishmael, Abraham's son by Hagar, his first, is the patriarch of Islam. Melville's Ishmael is part of - and our portal into - the madman Ahab's pursuit of the great white whale in Moby Dick. Esmail derives from both, the questor from Melville neutralizing the religious threat from the Bible. Here the great white whale so many seek is the better life democracies have to offer the global oppressed. The defeated Esmail passes his fine suit on to another man, a younger man, for him to deploy when he sells what he has in Europe in hopes of admission. For the exotic we fear is also the exotic we desire.
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intense
Kirpianuscus12 March 2020
One of films who you feel, in intense manner, scene by scene. Supposing, admiring the inspired cinematography, surprised by details, seduced by acting and by the gentle fragility of characters. A delicate portrait of hope, honesty and love. And admirable work of Ardan Esmaili . A film about deep loneliness, about fall of adaptation, a pure poem about life, chances and the need to be only yourself.
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3/10
The European Gigolo
Oslo_Jargo10 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
*** This review may contain spoilers ***

*Plot and ending analyzed*

A deadly dull, vacuous, and trivial film, The Charmer attempts to be both crafty and ingenious, yet it does not sustain any interest from an intelligent viewer. It follows Esmail, an intrinsically boring Iranian man, who is supposedly the most 'attractive man in any bar', with his one cheap suit and his 'suave' ways of sipping wine. Ridiculous is more to the point; women are sleeping with him at every turn, why, I don't know. Well, I do actually, it is written that way. A cheap trope. The sex scenes inspire vomiting so have a barf bag handy while watching the film.

He works at a furniture mover company and sends all his money home. You can tell right away this guy is two-timing a wife or lover in Iran. Esmail, the intrinsically boring Iranian man, meets up with a fellow Persian later, another dull waif-like woman who doesn't seem to eat much at all. Both of them use drugs, smoke and drink a lot. He falls in love with her and it all crumbles.

The director throws in the "racist European" stereotype in the form of some husband whose wife dived out of a building, but who also slept with Esmail, the boring Iranian man. No racism is written into the parts of the Iranians at all, thusly making it a cartoon-like portrayal of life. He goes back home, where we see two children and his "devoted" wife in Islamic garb. He gets the "moral lecture" from his Father-in-law while they smoke cigarettes. Then it ends as if we are supposed to believe because he's back home and adopting the state 'religion', he's a "good guy". He strayed a bit with Western materialistic ways, at least that is the camouflaged message here. It's really an unimaginative ending.

Don't expect much from this film.
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9/10
A love story, and what you will and won't sacrifice for what you think will be a better life
daniel-sorensen-126 August 2018
Initially starting with Iranian Ezmail, and his quest to find a key to staying in Denmark (or rather a girl who will sign that they are partners), he then meets a daughter of Iranian immigrants, and things become more complicated. At the same time he also starts to encounter the repercussions of his searching for fake love, and of hiding/ignoring his past.

I watched this movie during the Sakhalin film festival, and got to meet Soho Rezanejad afterwards, who game some insight as to her character, and how she can related strongly. And she highlighted that this is not just a story of an immigrant coming to Denmark, and trying to find a way to stay, but also the children of immigrants, and how they search for belonging.

I definitely recommend giving this a watch.
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2/10
Boring movie
casper_mortensen21 October 2018
Trailer looked good. But it was 2 really long hours. Cannot recommend this movie at all. Waste of time!
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10/10
The Charmer is a powerful piece of cinema!
alysonburston-3656430 July 2018
I saw this movie at Dubai Film Festival last year. It got a lot of buzz from the press and audience and all of the screenings where sold out. I managed to get a ticket and have to agree with all the positive reviews. This is a powerful piece of cinema! Intense and touching with great cinematography! I was on the edge of my seat throughout the entire movie! The acting is excellent and the story kept surprising me until the very end! I highly recommend this movie!
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1/10
Dont waste time
nicolaifogelberg19 September 2021
The worsts movie I've ever seen. Wow. Don't you waste time on that. I wish I've never seen it.
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10/10
Pleasant surprise...
ilirejam17 September 2018
The reviewer daniel-sorensen basically wrote everything I was thinking, give it a read, and give this movie a watch - I did not expect to be hooked from the beginning to the end. It's very authentic, and relatable. Great acting - and the movie stirs up a lot of interesting thoughts... Give it a go, you will not be dissappointed.
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10/10
hoping for a new life
cdcrb14 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Esmail is in Copenhagen, looking to stay. unfortunately for him he must hook up with someone to stay in the country. I don't know the exact Denmark rules as to immigrants, but he's about to be shipped back to iran. anyway, things take a turn, as they do in life. I believed every minute of it. it's not a comedy.
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9/10
there is nothing wrong with this film
recepvesek16 June 2020
Luck of the draw , i came across this film on hoopladigital. story is compelling ( to me at least ). acting is beyond decent. enjoyable film , strongly recommended...
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