The New York Times by A.O. Scott
This film, Mr. Caetano's feature-length directorial debut, has an emotional integrity that's concise and direct.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Argentina, Netherlands · 2001
1h 15m
Director Adrián Caetano
Starring Freddy Flores, Rosa Sánchez, Oscar Bertea, Enrique Liporace
Genre Drama
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A Bolivian immigrant working illegally as a cook in a small restaurant in Buenos Aires suffers abuse and discrimination from its customers.
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The New York Times by A.O. Scott
This film, Mr. Caetano's feature-length directorial debut, has an emotional integrity that's concise and direct.
A dignified second film for Caetano.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
Turns the dangerous monotony of poverty and unemployment into something nearly hypnotic.
While not particularly dramatically compelling, the film is carefully constructed and exposes both the economic and sexual exploitation of illegal workers.
Los Angeles Times by Manohla Dargis
There are no big surprises in Caetano's film, which plays out exactly as ordained, only a sense of life at its most precarious and real.
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
Virtually plot-free, the movie's organic cultivation of Argentina's economic tension and ethnophobic woes is smooth as silk.
Caetano's blunt, deterministic ending underlines the point too neatly, but in dignifying an outcast whose life is treated as anonymous and disposable, he puts a human face on a national tragedy.
The gritty photography is a perfect match for the film's harsh realities, the script is taut (not a word or motion is wasted) and the acting is raw and realistic.
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