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Nickel Boys 2024 - ()
Hard Truths 2024 - ()
Bring Them Down 2024 - ()
Becoming Led Zeppelin 2025 - ()
Marked Men Rule + Shaw 2025 - ()
Street Punx 2024 - ()
Fox and Hare Save the Forest 2024 - ()
The Wish Swap 2025 - ()
Heart Eyes 2025 - ()
I Thought My Husbands Wife Was Dead 2024 - ()
Better Man 2024 - ()
Turn Me On 2024 - ()
Melanies Grave 2024 - ()
Reality Bites A Hannah Swensen Mystery 2025 - ()
Black Diamond 2025 - ()
Horror Able 2024 - ()
Fight Another Day 2024 - ()
Down Below 2024 - ()
Over The Red River 2024 - ()
Modì Three Days on the Wing of Madness 2024 - ()
It’s true what they say about not being able to judge a book by its cover – or a movie by its trailer or description. Such is the case with writer-director Agustín Godoy’s debut feature, a trainwreck of a film that makes virtually no sense from start to finish. As a sort of screwball comedy (a term I use loosely) in which multiple characters are trying to get their hands on a mysterious locked backpack, the film follows them as they relentlessly pursue one another throughout the neighborhoods of Buenos Aires in a race to get the goods. In some ways, it loosely follows the narrative format of comedy classics like “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World” (1963) or “What’s Up, Doc?” (1972) only with a lot less skill (or humor, for that matter). Its plot line features a collection of disjointed elements that feel like they were dumped into a spaghetti bowl and thrown against the wall to see what would stick (most of which doesn’t). Carrying the story are an equally mismatched assemblage of characters, including an insomniac office worker (hence the title, I suppose) who frequently and inexplicably begins speaking in rhyme, a quirky Tarot card reader who doubles as a security guard when not cluelessly following her impulses, a band of inept mob mules and a mysterious woman simply known as the Duchess who appears to be the intended recipient of the backpack. In telling this story, however, the movie is all over the map with plot developments, most of which don’t relate to one another and are lazily connected by endless (and I do mean endless) sequences of characters running from one another throughout the streets, parks, landmarks and industrial areas of the city. I’ll admit that this makes for a rather comprehensive and nicely filmed travelogue about Buenos Aires, and it features a reasonably engaging, well-edited opening sequence, but that’s about all this woefully sorry effort has going for it. Under no conditions should you waste your precious time on this hot mess.