The New York Times by Dave Kehr
Too predictable to leave much of an impression.
Argentina · 2002
Rated R · 1h 31m
Director Verónica Chen
Starring Cecilia Bengolea, Leonardo Brzezicki, Adrián Fondari, Pablo Razuk
Genre Drama, Romance
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A suicidal young singer named Reni (Cecilia Bengolea) is about to get kicked out of her band when she meets a male gigolo, Andres (Leonardo Brezicki), at an ATM after he picks her pocket. They begin an affair, and she decides to become a hooker so she can spend more time with her newfound love. Suicide's beginning to look good! Filmed in Buenos Aires.
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The New York Times by Dave Kehr
Too predictable to leave much of an impression.
A walk on the "dark side" that moves far more slowly than limited character insight requires.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
A jumbled composite of blurred images, poetic yearnings and metaphoric dialogue.
The film is a gorgeous nocturne of surprisingly little substance, a sleek advert for youthful anomie that never quite equals the sum of its pretensions.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
A venturesome, beautifully realized psychological mood piece that reveals its first-time feature director's understanding of the expressive power of the camera.
There is a great divide between a film about people in the throes of aimless, meandering lives and a film that is simply aimless and meandering. Smokers Only never acknowledges, let alone bridges, that gap.
Village Voice by Nick Rutigliano
Detached performances and a murky sound mix further the sense of suspended animation.
For every drop of black blood spilled...A white man pays.