
  As he prepare to leave Brussels, a Romanian construction worker bonds
        with a young Chinese-Belgian woman.
  Review by
        Benjamin Poole
  Directed by: Bas Devos
  Starring: Stefan Gota, Liyo Gong, Cedric Luvuezo, Teodor Corban, Saadia Bentaïeb, Alina Constantin
 
    
      Here's Here, but before we get to Here here's a question: once you
      reach a certain age, how on earth do people make new friends? When you're
      young and abide within institutions such as school, college or the various
      designations of the gig economy, it's easy because you're around people as
      dumb and full of fun as you are. There are social scenes. It's expected
      that you hang out, and one thing leads to another. But now, today... How
      do you do it? In what ways are you supposed to cultivate a meaningful,
      platonic relationship with another human being past 25? I'm not talking
      about romantic pairings - which, honestly, is a far easier prospect to
      organise - but becoming mates with someone. The answer, to me, remains a
      mystery (apart from joining a book club, which, to be fair, was a good
      shout - but you do have to read some awful books and be nice about them),
      and perhaps the reason why Here, Bas Devos' poetic, gentle meditation on the connections formed
      between two lonely people, who are both liminal within their respective
      contexts, struck such a melancholic chord with me.

      We open in Brussels on a high-rise construction site: always an intensely
      cinematic mise-en-scene, with exposed frames and beams framing subjects
      within an expressive, threshold territory (the people who make these lux
      city spaces are rarely the ones who will enjoy the finished products). We
      home in on Stefan (Stefan Gota), a Romanian builder. On his bus
      route home, Devos pointedly frames Stefan sharing a cramped back seat with
      two other workers: conversation is sparse and functional. Stefan arrives
      home alone, where he sleeps, wakes, cleans his fridge out, makes soup, and
      batches it up in Tupperware via a sequence which takes over five minutes.
      Neither Stefan nor Devos are in any particular rush, and the subsequent
      pace of Here is transcendental in its deliberation and its
      sincere storytelling.
      Stefan isn't isolated, just adrift. He meets a pal with similar
      intangibility, working as a night receptionist at a swanky hotel. The two
      sit at empty tables, which under real terms they probably couldn't afford,
      and eat the soup which Stefan home-made earlier; trespassers upon a life
      beyond their means but which wouldn't exist without people like them
      (there are apparently over 43,000 Romanian workers in Brussels).
      Throughout the realism of the narrative, Grimm Vandekerckhove's
      cinematography infuses the frame with deep colours and oblique imagery,
      imbuing human significance on the ostensibly simple narrative. In a world
      of shadows and transitions, bonds of friendship are held on to
      tightly.

      To wit, we are introduced to Shuxiu (Liyo Gong) via a voice-overed
      sequence which focusses intensely on the nature of moss and how it grows,
      a fitting metaphor for the organic pace of this film. Shuxiu is a
      university biology lecturer and by night works in her aunt's Chinese
      restaurant. This is where she meets Stefan, and the first seeds of their
      relationship are sown. Like the close ups of foliage and fauna which
      Here favours, we see their relationship blossom, albeit
      slowly (Devos has primed us for the union throughout the film by
      deliberately locating Stefan within green milieus as he wanders,
      delivering his soup to the people he meets).

      And that's it; a gentle hour passes where people talk, they smile and
      share experiences, with the audience along for the stroll, too. But
      perhaps if Here, with its tender humanity, does have a message, it's that meeting people
      isn't that hard, not really. All of us in our own ways are lonely, and we
      welcome interaction. All it takes it that understanding and belief in each
      other: that lack of fear. And a big tureen of homemade soup. Pass the
      ladle.
    
     
    
      Here is on UK/ROI VOD now.
    
     
