-2016-: Esteros

Watch it on a warm, lazy afternoon when you’re in the mood for something reflective and bittersweet. Bring patience, but leave your cynicism at the door.

Director: Papu Curotto Starring: Ignacio Rogers, Esteban Masturini, Joaquín Parada, Blas Finardi Niz Esteros -2016-

Furthermore, the film doesn’t break new thematic ground. Anyone familiar with LGBTQ+ cinema will recognize the beats: the idyllic childhood romance, the forced separation, the closeted adult return, the confrontation with the past. It’s a beautiful version of a story we’ve seen before, but it doesn't subvert expectations. Watch it on a warm, lazy afternoon when

★★★½ (3.5/5)

The film cuts between two timelines. In the 1990s, childhood best friends Matías and Jerónimo spend a carefree summer vacation in the rural esteros. Their innocent friendship blossoms into a fumbling, tender sexual awakening. But when Matías’s father gets a job offer in Brazil, the boys are cruelly separated. Years later, in their late 20s, Matías (now a reserved aspiring biologist) returns to the esteros for a local festival with his girlfriend. There, he is reunited with Jerónimo, who has grown into a free-spirited, openhearted young man living in the family home. The old spark, repressed for over a decade, immediately reignites. Anyone familiar with LGBTQ+ cinema will recognize the

Esteros wisely avoids melodrama. There are no shouting matches or dramatic car crashes. The central conflict is internal: Matías’s fear of his own desires versus Jerónimo’s patient acceptance. The presence of Matías’s girlfriend, Rochi (played with sympathetic realism by Renata Calmon), is handled with surprising maturity. She isn’t a villain; she’s simply the wrong person in the wrong place, sensing the invisible wall between her and her boyfriend.