Private Desert | Telescope Film
Private Desert

Private Desert (Deserto Particular)

Critic Rating

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User Rating

40-year-old Daniel has been suspended from active police work and is under internal investigation for violence. When Sara, his online girlfriend, stops answering his texts, he decides to drive north in search of her. He shows Sara's picture around, but nobody seems to recognize the woman, until one man says he can put the two in touch under very specific conditions.

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What are critics saying?

90

Los Angeles Times by Carlos Aguilar

Buoyed by two superb performances, writer-director Aly Muritiba’s tenderly electrifying new feature is part sensual queer romance and part moving character study.

85

Film Threat

Couple the brilliant construction with the intense performances from Saboia and Fasanaro, and we have one of the more memorable foreign romance films in recent memory.

85

Film Threat by Sumner Forbes

Couple the brilliant construction with the intense performances from Saboia and Fasanaro, and we have one of the more memorable foreign romance films in recent memory.

83

The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak

So many scenes unfold with static frames to give actors our undivided attention, letting them evolve emotionally without unnecessary cuts undermining authenticity.

70

The New York Times by Beatrice Loayza

Muritiba understands that any portrait of masculinity that fixates too intensely on the cruelties and self-denials of machista culture are futile. Instead, he finds grace in stolen moments of tenderness.

70

Variety by Manuel Betancourt

The film comes alive in its second half, which deepens and complicates the story we thought we were watching, about a disgraced cop trying to run away from the violence that’s set to cost him his job and his reputation. For some, the tender empathy that runs through the film’s latter half may not be enough to offset its choice of sympathetic leading man.

50

Slant Magazine by Diego Semerene

Aly Muritiba’s film is always telling the viewer that death-ness and trans-ness bear the intimacy of Siamese sisters.

50

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

Director and co-writer Aly Muritiba’s melodrama is slow — 29 minute-long PROLOGUE slow — formulaic, dated and obvious considering “The Crying Game” opened 30 years ago north of the equator. But tender performances might reward those patient enough to sit through its scenic, formulaic and dramatically-limited longueurs.

40

TheWrap by Dan Callahan

Nothing about the interactions between Daniel and his former pen pal in the second half of the movie are even remotely believable, and so the rosy climax of Private Desert enters the dangerous realm of fantasy and wish-fulfillment, revealing that the makers of this film are as recklessly naïve and morally questionable as their protagonists.