Un agente dell'ICE alle prese con i dilemmi morali per la sicurezza dei confini e una donna priva di documenti che lotta per sfuggire a uno spietato cartello, si incrociano e lavorano insiem... Leggi tuttoUn agente dell'ICE alle prese con i dilemmi morali per la sicurezza dei confini e una donna priva di documenti che lotta per sfuggire a uno spietato cartello, si incrociano e lavorano insieme per salvare la vita di una ragazza innocente.Un agente dell'ICE alle prese con i dilemmi morali per la sicurezza dei confini e una donna priva di documenti che lotta per sfuggire a uno spietato cartello, si incrociano e lavorano insieme per salvare la vita di una ragazza innocente.
Zoe Saldaña
- Esmee
- (as Zoe Saldana)
- …
Morningstar Angeline
- Migrant Mother
- (as MorningStar Angeline)
Recensioni in evidenza
Absolutely in love with Zoe Saldana. To be honest, all the actors/actresses did a really great job in this film, but the issue isn't with the acting... the issues lie with the storyline. Things started off strong and caught my attention really quickly - An immigrant woman who is fleeing from her abuser only to come in contact with more abuse while trying to get over the border. She bonds with a young girl who gets separated from her mother and Zoe's character becomes protective over the girl. This movie had everything to be an amazing, highly recommended movie, but the lack of execution in the storyline was so disappointing! What happened? Where did they end up? Where are they now? The abrupt ending leaves you with such a long list of questions. I hate movies that leave the story unfinished or that leave the plot at the peak with no real ending which is sadly, exactly what happened in this movie. What could've been a solid 7-8 star rating plummeted to a 3-4 star rating due to the lack of ending and lack of answers.
I think Zoe is an incredible actress. With that being said, I wish she would have skipped this film. It didn't do anything for her career. The story line seemed like it was going to be good but it was terrible! I'm so disappointed. I could have turned it off in the middle and still felt the same as I did at the end. The ending was nonexistent really. The story lacked many great opportunities it could have had to tell a real and raw depiction of the circumstances the characters were in.
Why describe the movie and the ice agent and Zoe's character working together? They didn't work together AT ALL.
I'm really bummed that I wasted my time on a movie I had high hopes for.
Why describe the movie and the ice agent and Zoe's character working together? They didn't work together AT ALL.
I'm really bummed that I wasted my time on a movie I had high hopes for.
I never rate movies, but this has to be said!
The description of the film and even the shortened description don't hold true...The main characters actually never work together to save a girl, they barely cross paths in this sloppily put-together movie that didn't know what it wanted to be and left the viewer sad and confused.
The topic is complicated and should feel sad, but the movie was just bad, good acting though. At times there was this hopeful artsy element, but it felt random and was not consistent at all.
Go ahead and skip this one when you're looking for a good drama movie to watch on Hulu.
The description of the film and even the shortened description don't hold true...The main characters actually never work together to save a girl, they barely cross paths in this sloppily put-together movie that didn't know what it wanted to be and left the viewer sad and confused.
The topic is complicated and should feel sad, but the movie was just bad, good acting though. At times there was this hopeful artsy element, but it felt random and was not consistent at all.
Go ahead and skip this one when you're looking for a good drama movie to watch on Hulu.
The Absence of Eden
In a divided border town, a Mexican woman escaping violence and an ICE agent find themselves drawn together. The Absence of Eden is unflinching in its portrayal of human trafficking and the exploitation of undocumented people - as well as the different reactions from those in charge of keeping order. In his feature debut, writer/director Marco Perego uses poetic and religious metaphors to heighten the plight of those seeking safety and better lives, but he comes off too heavy-handedly at times. He lacks subtlety on a divisive issue that's anything but black-and-white.
Esmeralda "Esme" Rojas (Zoë Saldaña) performs a lap dance on a sleazy cartel member at a seedy Mexican strip club. She pushes back against his advances for something more until he won't take no for an answer. Across the border in Texas, Shipp (Garrett Hedlund) ignores phone calls from his dad - with whom he's been estranged - while going through training to become an ICE agent. Shipp meets his new partner, Evans (Chris Coy), who is a hardened veteran that hates all undocumented immigrants and takes the rookie under his wing.
In Mexico, Esme tearfully kisses her abuela goodbye after collecting all of her belongings; she hopes her life savings will be enough to pay the coyote. Esme has to leave right now before the cartel finds her. In Texas, Shipp drinks by himself at a bar while thinking about Evans' behavior and attitude on their first day together. He then sees beautiful raven-haired Yadira (Adria Arjona) dancing with another man; there's an instant spark between them.
Esme's journey through the desert starts off on a scary note: The coyote "wants to wet his beak" with an extra payment for his services. A terrified Esme hides among the group huddled together. The disgusting coyote starts moving closer to a young girl (Maeve Garay) clutching her scared mother (Morningstar Angeline). Esme pleads with him to stop; he's impressed by her bravery. Does she speak English? Esme shakes in fear, but answers yes. He gives her a card with a number on it - if she makes it across the border, his cousin will have a job waiting for her. In Texas, Shipp gets ready for his first raid alongside Evans; even so, his mind is still on Yadira when Evans unleashes violent action.
Perego - who is Saldaña's husband and producing partner - shows the terrible risks faced by women and girls as they attempt illegal passage into America: They're at the mercy of rape, robbery and possible murder. Yet the terrors don't stop if they succeed. Esme becomes more indebted to the gang that got her across; she's their servant, forced to do whatever they want. Where can she go? Who will aid her? The American police aren't coming to save her; they'll only send her back to the cartel's revenge.
As an officer of the law, Shipp battles with his conscience. He doesn't know Yadira's immigration status; their growing relationship could be completely opposed to his sworn duty. Every Mexican is an enemy in Evans' eyes - so what'll he do if Yadira turns out to be undocumented? Shipp knows he could ruin his career by making the wrong decision. Love isn't all-conquering for either Evans or the US government.
Right from the beginning, The Absence of Eden makes its position known. Undocumented individuals desperately need assistance while ICE are heartless brutes in their merciless duties. This is a black and white distinction that is entirely unfair. Evans is not called a bad apple spoiling the bunch. His ruthlessness mirrors the evil Mexican cartel and drug dealers controlling Esme. That's one step too far.
Every day they go to work, border patrol agents risk their lives at ground zero of a human catastrophe. They do not make immigration policy. To lump their tactics together with those of deplorable criminal organizations is a false and wrong comparison. ICE agents are not raping and murdering undocumented people en masse. The sad truth is that people come to America because they think better lives exist here - that is not always true - Esme serves as a good example; she would have been worse off had she stayed in Mexico.
Perego marries astronomical imagery of space and stars with Esme\'s religious belief in God will provide salvation - but that's just me guessing; Perego has no clear intention here, it seems like. One could assume the title refers to Earth as paradise lost for the illegal aliens; this is an intellectual part of the movie which only serves to confuse more than anything else.
The Absence of Eden evokes such strong emotions because you care about Esme's story being so terrible. It's all true, every last bit - what she goes through is honest, real life at its most viciousness - however there should've been equal time given on both sides: protectors being mainly honorable; border workers shouldn't be universally condemned for doing their jobs but instead treated fairly
review written by artist jayakumar jrain.
In a divided border town, a Mexican woman escaping violence and an ICE agent find themselves drawn together. The Absence of Eden is unflinching in its portrayal of human trafficking and the exploitation of undocumented people - as well as the different reactions from those in charge of keeping order. In his feature debut, writer/director Marco Perego uses poetic and religious metaphors to heighten the plight of those seeking safety and better lives, but he comes off too heavy-handedly at times. He lacks subtlety on a divisive issue that's anything but black-and-white.
Esmeralda "Esme" Rojas (Zoë Saldaña) performs a lap dance on a sleazy cartel member at a seedy Mexican strip club. She pushes back against his advances for something more until he won't take no for an answer. Across the border in Texas, Shipp (Garrett Hedlund) ignores phone calls from his dad - with whom he's been estranged - while going through training to become an ICE agent. Shipp meets his new partner, Evans (Chris Coy), who is a hardened veteran that hates all undocumented immigrants and takes the rookie under his wing.
In Mexico, Esme tearfully kisses her abuela goodbye after collecting all of her belongings; she hopes her life savings will be enough to pay the coyote. Esme has to leave right now before the cartel finds her. In Texas, Shipp drinks by himself at a bar while thinking about Evans' behavior and attitude on their first day together. He then sees beautiful raven-haired Yadira (Adria Arjona) dancing with another man; there's an instant spark between them.
Esme's journey through the desert starts off on a scary note: The coyote "wants to wet his beak" with an extra payment for his services. A terrified Esme hides among the group huddled together. The disgusting coyote starts moving closer to a young girl (Maeve Garay) clutching her scared mother (Morningstar Angeline). Esme pleads with him to stop; he's impressed by her bravery. Does she speak English? Esme shakes in fear, but answers yes. He gives her a card with a number on it - if she makes it across the border, his cousin will have a job waiting for her. In Texas, Shipp gets ready for his first raid alongside Evans; even so, his mind is still on Yadira when Evans unleashes violent action.
Perego - who is Saldaña's husband and producing partner - shows the terrible risks faced by women and girls as they attempt illegal passage into America: They're at the mercy of rape, robbery and possible murder. Yet the terrors don't stop if they succeed. Esme becomes more indebted to the gang that got her across; she's their servant, forced to do whatever they want. Where can she go? Who will aid her? The American police aren't coming to save her; they'll only send her back to the cartel's revenge.
As an officer of the law, Shipp battles with his conscience. He doesn't know Yadira's immigration status; their growing relationship could be completely opposed to his sworn duty. Every Mexican is an enemy in Evans' eyes - so what'll he do if Yadira turns out to be undocumented? Shipp knows he could ruin his career by making the wrong decision. Love isn't all-conquering for either Evans or the US government.
Right from the beginning, The Absence of Eden makes its position known. Undocumented individuals desperately need assistance while ICE are heartless brutes in their merciless duties. This is a black and white distinction that is entirely unfair. Evans is not called a bad apple spoiling the bunch. His ruthlessness mirrors the evil Mexican cartel and drug dealers controlling Esme. That's one step too far.
Every day they go to work, border patrol agents risk their lives at ground zero of a human catastrophe. They do not make immigration policy. To lump their tactics together with those of deplorable criminal organizations is a false and wrong comparison. ICE agents are not raping and murdering undocumented people en masse. The sad truth is that people come to America because they think better lives exist here - that is not always true - Esme serves as a good example; she would have been worse off had she stayed in Mexico.
Perego marries astronomical imagery of space and stars with Esme\'s religious belief in God will provide salvation - but that's just me guessing; Perego has no clear intention here, it seems like. One could assume the title refers to Earth as paradise lost for the illegal aliens; this is an intellectual part of the movie which only serves to confuse more than anything else.
The Absence of Eden evokes such strong emotions because you care about Esme's story being so terrible. It's all true, every last bit - what she goes through is honest, real life at its most viciousness - however there should've been equal time given on both sides: protectors being mainly honorable; border workers shouldn't be universally condemned for doing their jobs but instead treated fairly
review written by artist jayakumar jrain.
I hope a lot more people go out and see this film and that it will be available for purchase and streaming at some point. It was beautifully shot and every frame could be a photograph of art! Zoe was amazing & in my opinion some of her best work I've ever seen, and that goes for all of the cast not a weak one in the bunch. The story is heartfelt, and only a glimpse of what people in both sides of the fence are going through with immigration and sadly, it's probably 100x's worse than anything this film will show you. It does end abruptly but doesn't bother me as it makes you think about what you just watched. I hope one day we get the true director's cut from Marco. I highly recommend this film to anyone!
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 37.265 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 23.912 USD
- 14 apr 2024
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 41.253 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Colore
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