Peter Bradshaw 

Goodbye Solo

An instantly gripping, funny, quietly persuasive drama that held me from the first frames, says Peter Bradshaw
  
  

Scene from Goodbye Solo (2009)
Tastes of Cherry … Goodbye Solo Photograph: PR

Ramin Bahrani is a director who is finding a style of American cinema that is different from both Hollywood commerce and indie-Sundance drear: his new movie is an instantly gripping, funny, quietly persuasive drama that held me from the first frames.

Souleymane Sy Savane gives a superbly likeable performance as Solo, a Senegalese taxi driver in North Carolina. One day, he picks up a morose old white guy called William, played by Red West, who offers Solo $1,000 to take him to a remote and dangerous beauty spot on a certain date. The exuberant and compassionate Solo suspects that William wishes to make away with himself, and so tries to involve himself in his life, even insisting that William coach him for his upcoming Airline Flight Attendant exam.

Perhaps inspired by Kiarostami's 1997 classic Taste Of Cherry, the movie is nonetheless entirely distinctive: about friendship and perhaps also about the impossibility of ever really knowing another person.

 

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