This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
Review by Sophia Pro
This review may contain spoilers.
Sophia’s review published on Letterboxd:
There Is a presumably unintentional spider crawling on the wall in the back of one of the shots in this, scared me a lot.
Lola needs someone who fucking stays with her more, like bro, I wouldn't leave my wife crying when she's begging me to stay home just one time.
Especially if she'd been through what lola has.
Bitch the sound of the Fucking spinning plate song as the TV cuts out and the thunder is going.
Never been so scared of a plate song in my life.
On a real note though, this shit is good, its sort of slow burn but like atmospherically sick at all times.
The scene with the kids and the dog, how they blocked the yucky with the couch, that was so smart.
A lot of the shots in this were just so good, the sets are gorgeous.
The shot of Adolfo on fire on the roof, what the fuck. Why did he come in also, like bro its raining out stay out there, and when the fuck was stop drop and roll invented.
Also, ya'll should have gone back to her town.
Also I watched this dubbed mostly but I went back to the Spanish for the times when lola is screaming, my god what a performer.
This bitch putting the bag on her head like the kids did because it's her only hope, in a fucking house on fire, like rapidly burning, girl.
Also a house burning while there's rain pouring, literally out of the fire and into the flood.