Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl
There’s nothing fussy about any shot of Nobody’s Watching, but there’s also no shot wasted, and no shot that doesn’t communicate something vital about the city or her protagonist.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Argentina, Spain, Colombia · 2017
1h 42m
Director Julia Solomonoff
Starring Guillermo Pfening, Elena Roger, Rafael Ferro, Marco Antonio Caponi
Genre Drama
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Nico is a young Argentinian actor who is struggling to break into the US film industry. But, despite his failures, he won't give up. Alone but eager, Nico tries to pave his own way in New York City --- fighting biases, strained relationships, and illusory opportunities along the way.
Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl
There’s nothing fussy about any shot of Nobody’s Watching, but there’s also no shot wasted, and no shot that doesn’t communicate something vital about the city or her protagonist.
The Playlist by Bradley Warren
Despite some flat moments, Nobody’s Watching is consistently engrossing,
The New York Times by Glenn Kenny
Nobody’s Watching addresses immigration issues head on, but it’s more about being set existentially adrift.
The Hollywood Reporter by Jonathan Holland
Though the script is pretty good on depicting the broken dreams that strew the path of the wannabe actor, its scope reaches wider, making it a timely portrayal (immigration, Brexit) on the multiple frustrations of being a stranger in a strange land, even when that stranger is as bourgeois as they come.
Slant Magazine by Peter Goldberg
Julia Solomonoff's film ripples with a palpable sense of the sheer distance between the down and out actor at its center and his goals.
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