Abzurdah

Cielo is a teenage student from the city of La Plata who meets Alejo, a man ten years older than her, a native of Avellaneda, with whom she begins a relationship and falls madly in love.

Submerged in a superficial environment, without friends and in an adult world that understands little of the adolescent universe, the relationship becomes an obsession for Cielo, a loquacious, incisive and dizzying narrator, who leads us through a history of unrequited love where the option to stop eating becomes the illusion of a perfect life.

Javier Porta Fouz from the newspaper La Nación said in his review of the film: "We are dealing with a character that exists, which is clearly, that is imposed in situations that intensify but do not end up putting together a story with tension or with special fluency."

In addition, Juan Pablo Cinelli of the newspaper Página 12 said, "A film that can be compared to a handful of sand: blunt, rough and abundant at the beginning, but as the story progresses it can not avoid slipping slowly between the fingers."

On the other hand, Horacio Bilbao of the Clarín newspaper adds, "The promissory debut of China Suárez [...] and the rarefied love story that accentuates its crisis, allows Daniela Goggi (fundamental to direct a woman) to escape of the calculation of marketing."