Fremont

Fremont              4 ½ stars

We return again to a movie that was first shown at Sundance in 2023 with Fremont by Iranian born filmmaker Babak Jalali. One wouldn’t think that a story about an Afghan immigrant escaping from her war-torn country to the United States would make for a good comedy, but that is exactly what Jalali has set out to do. Donya (Anaita Wali Zada, who herself escaped from Afghanistan) is a young Afghan woman who was a translator for the US Army and now resides in Fremont, California, having left her family behind. She has a job working in a Chinese cookie factory in San Francisco, where she seems to have a very bland life. She lives in an apartment building where many fellow Afghans reside, but has contact with many non-Afghans due to her job. There is her boss at the cookie factory who is always upbeat and seems to care about her, her coworker who is often looking for a date, and her psychiatrist who she seems to have conned into giving her free sessions with her complaints about not being able to sleep. Zada portrays Donya with a deadpan look, never cracking a smile or showing any emotion, yet she is someone that people have empathy for. At the factory she lands the job of writing the cookie fortunes when she convinces the owner that she has the intelligence to write the encouraging yet vague messages that the customers will find interesting. But then she takes the chance of writing a personal message with her phone number and putting it in the cookies in an attempt to reach out to someone. This could change her life but may lead to other unforeseen consequences. The style of the movie done in black and white and with straight ahead shots seems to be from an earlier period of filmmaking and something we haven’t seen in a while. The film is very low key and slow moving, but is guaranteed to get some laughs from the audience. Zada is right for the role of Donya and is very believable as the young Afghan who seems lost yet determined to change her life. Fans of the show The Bear will recognize Jeremy Allen White as the lonely mechanic that Donya meets on one of her adventures. Fremont is a moving story about a lost person who holds on to the possibility of being found. I recommend it.