The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
This Is Not Berlin so wants to evoke a time and a place that the backdrop engulfs the characters like a supernova.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Mexico · 2019
1h 55m
Director Hari Sama
Starring Xabiani Ponce de León, José Antonio Toledano, Mauro Sánchez Navarro, Ximena Romo
Genre Drama
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It's 1986 in Mexico City, and seventeen-year-old Carlos doesn't fit in anywhere, not with his family nor with the friends he has chosen in school. But everything changes when he is invited to a mythical nightclub and discovers the underground nightlife scene: punk, sexual liberty, and drugs.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
This Is Not Berlin so wants to evoke a time and a place that the backdrop engulfs the characters like a supernova.
What’s lovely about the best scenes in This Is Not Berlin is the sense Sama captures of all the possibilities opening up for Carlos.
Hari Sama’s fourth feature as writer-director is something special, and one of the best of its particular subgenre.
Slant Magazine by Diego Semerene
Hari Sama never quite manages to seamlessly sync the film’s anti-bourgeois political commitments to its soap-operatic register.
The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
The events onscreen are semi-autobiographical for Sama and thus a document of the turmoil those his age at the time faced when external expectations and internal hopes clashed. At its center: love. The power it has to bring us together opposite its potential to tear us apart.
The Playlist by Jonathan Christian
Similar to the cringeworthy performance art that wraps itself around the core of the film, This Is Not Berlin is emotionally hollow, more than a bit confused, and regrettably forgettable.
The Hollywood Reporter by Jonathan Holland
Smart, good-looking and buzzing with edginess, Sama's fourth feature has been made with a love and care that's palpable in every frame, allowing us to forgive its occasional, inevitable brushes with cliche.
The film has style in spades; it would have substance, too, if only it knew when to quit.
RogerEbert.com by Tomris Laffly
Sama owes much of the authenticity and visual panache of This Is Not Berlin to his cinematographer Alfredo Altamirano. The DP’s nervy, panoramic compositions heighten the precise production design of various multimedia art pieces and an assortment of impeccably choreographed street protests.
Sama’s film captures the quicksilver sparks of an artistic moment – the point at which a loose bohemian community collectively finds its voice and forces the mainstream to take notice.
Lead us not into temptation...