Taglines: Every day thousands of people illegally cross our borders… only one thing stands in their way. America.
Crossing Over is an American independent drama film about illegal immigrants of different nationalities struggling to achieve legal status in Los Angeles, and stars Harrison Ford as an immigration officer. The film deals with the border, document fraud and extortion, the asylum and green card process, work-site enforcement, naturalization, the office of counter-terrorism, and the clash of cultures. Crossing Over was written and directed by Wayne Kramer, himself an immigrant from South Africa, and is a remake of his 1995 short film of the same name. Kramer produced the film alongside Frank Marshall.
After immigrant Mireya Sanchez is deported, immigration officer Max Brogan takes care of her little son and brings him to the boy’s grandparents in Mexico. Later the woman is found dead near the border. Brogan returns to the grandparents to tell them the bad news.
Taslima Jahangir, a 15-year-old girl from Bangladesh, presents a paper at school promoting that people should try to understand the 9/11 hijackers. The school principal reports this to authorities. FBI agents raid the home and ransack the girl’s room, reading her diaries and a school assignment on the ethics of suicide; they criticize her room as “too austere” and note that she has an account on an Islamic website.
The profiler says this makes her look like a would-be suicide bomber. Taslima is not charged for this, but it turns out that she stays in US illegally. She was born in Bangladesh and brought to the United States at age three. Taslima’s continued presence jeopardizes her chances and puts at risk her two younger siblings, who are US citizens because they were born in the country. Denise Frankel, the immigration defense attorney, suggests that instead of the whole family’s being deported, Taslima can leave for Bangladesh with her mother while the rest of the family stays in the U.S.
Cole Frankel, an immigration officer, gets into a car accident with Claire Shepard, an aspiring actress from Australia. Realizing that she is in the country illegally, Cole makes an arrangement with Claire whereby she will have unlimited sex with him for two months in exchange for a green card. When Cole eventually says he wants to leave his wife for Claire, she makes it clear that she holds him in contempt and is only sleeping with him for the green card.
In a moment of clarity, Cole exempts Claire from completing the two months and arranges for her to get her green card in the mail. Authorities eventually confront Claire about the suspiciousness in her immigration paperwork, and she admits to the sexual arrangement she had with Cole and leaves the country “voluntarily”. Cole is arrested. His wife Denise Frankel adopts a little girl from Nigeria, who has already been in the detention center for several years.
Brogan has a colleague, Hamid Baraheri. His family disapproves of his sister’s having sex with Javier Pedroza, a married man. Encouraged by his father, Farid Baraheri (Hamid’s brother) plans to scare the couple, but things get out of hand: he shoots both of them, and goes to Hamid, who helps him hide the evidence. Brogan slowly suspects Hamid’s involvement as the film progresses.
Also, Javier Pedroza works in a copy shop and makes extra money by providing counterfeit immigration papers. Claire had previously paid him for false papers before she had made her arrangement with Cole. But when Javier was killed, the authorities discovered her documents among his belongings, leading the immigration team to examine Claire’s case more closely.
South Korean teenager Yong Kim is about to be naturalized with the rest of his family, but he has started to hang out with a bad crowd and ultimately participates in a convenience store robbery to “pop his cherry” with his gang. Hamid happens to be at the same convenience store and kills the other robbers but (due to his own guilt over his involvement in his sister’s death) lets Yong Kim go free.
Gavin Kossef, an atheist Jewish musician from the United Kingdom pretends to be a religious Jew in order to get a job at a Jewish school, which allows him to stay in the U.S. In a test in which he has to demonstrate his familiarity with the Jewish religion he does not perform properly, but a rabbi asked to assess it approves it because of his voice. After the test, in private, the rabbi requires the immigrant to take lessons from him to eliminate the deficiencies in his knowledge.
Crossing Over (2009)
Directed by: Wayne Kramer
Starring: Harrison Ford, Ray Liotta, Ashley Judd, Jim Sturgess, Summer Bishil, Alice Eve, Alice Braga, Jacqueline Obradors, Melody Zara, Nina Nayebi, Alice Eve, Naila Azad, Shelley Malil
Screenplay by: Wayne Kramer, Frank Marshall
Production Design by: Toby Corbett
Cinematography by: Jim Whitaker
Film Editing by: Arthur Coburn
Costume Design by: Kristin M. Burke
Set Decoration by: Linda Lee Sutton
Art Direction by: Peter Borck
Music by: Mark Isham
MPAA Rating: R for pervasive language, some strong violence and sexuality / nudity.
Distributed by: The Weinstein Company
Release Date: February 27, 2009
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