Jesus | Telescope Film
Jesus

Jesus (Jesús)

Critic Rating

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User Rating

For 18-year-old Jesús, living with an emotionally distant father is a daily struggle. He turns to a routine of drugs, casual sex, watching TV, and performing in a K-Pop band with his friends. One drunken night, after committing an unthinkable crime, Jesús has no choice but to seek help from his father.

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What are critics saying?

90

Variety

Jesús investigates the darkest side of adolescence, raising a number of moral questions without providing easy answers. The top-notch cast is the icing on the cake, with Goic stoically embodying Chile’s hopes and failures while young Durán mesmerizes with his stunning androgyny.

90

Variety by Pamela Pianezza

Jesús investigates the darkest side of adolescence, raising a number of moral questions without providing easy answers. The top-notch cast is the icing on the cake, with Goic stoically embodying Chile’s hopes and failures while young Durán mesmerizes with his stunning androgyny.

83

The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak

Jesús proves a gripping cautionary tale unafraid to let its characters suffer for justice. A son’s mistake becomes a father’s failure and no matter what happens, no one’s soul is left whole.

80

Screen Daily by Jonathan Romney

The film imaginatively uses a presumably tight budget to claustrophobic advantage.

80

Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl

The tense final act...investigates its moral quandaries with a rigor this kind of bad-seed street-teen movie usually can’t manage.

80

Screen International by Jonathan Romney

The film imaginatively uses a presumably tight budget to claustrophobic advantage.

70

Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele

Guzzoni’s movie is an unsparing portrait of aimlessness told mostly in the queasiest shades.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij

Often shown in dark, flat and agitated closeups, Goic and Duran are both compelling performers.

63

Slant Magazine by Derek Smith

Fernando Guzzoni's Jesus is at its best when it steers clear of pat moralizing and simply yokes its moody sense of atmosphere to the aimlessness of the story’s young characters.

40

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

One feels the filmmaker trying hard to work out the inner struggles of his sad but largely unsympathetic characters. But his movie is as miserable and ultimately confounding as it is earnest.