I went to see it bcs is Argentinian, from a region I didn't know. As a tourism ad it works pretty well. I loved the big, fat dark-gray rabbits. The ways and work of these people (assuming that everything show is real) is interesting. There is practically no dialog. It fits the solitude of the landscape, Farrell's incapacity of communicate, the slow motion of the locals living there. It surely leaves an impression but is it good? Not sure. Things I didn't like: Some of the camera "tricks", like not moving from a frontal take, not pan, not showing other people that enter the room and make noise in the background (or the video game screen that begins the movie) are good, but too much of something good is saturating/interfering. It also leaves the impression that the director -cannot/don'want- do it in a different way. In the same way, cutting short some scenes and leaving others longer would have made a more interesting movie. Some other things felt artificial: Farrel's accent and modisms don't match the rest of the characters, which are probably locals, non actors. I've seen absolute non-actors carrying over whole movies, notably in Italian early realism (e.g., "La Terra Trema", "Germania Anno Zero", etc.). This is different. The lines (few) given to these people seem not to belong to them. Like if they had selected the wrong professions or had no rehearsals. Farrel begins and finish conversations with non-chalantly city-like (Buenos Aires-like?) fast modisms of speech that don't seem to match the other's characters speech in pronounciation or speed. He is supposed to be from this same area. In retrospective, considering how little he interacts with his shipmates, it's unbelievable that he had changed his ways of speech by traveling. This separates him from the others, is that the intention? The daughter's non-sequitur, without voice inflections, repetitions of "give me money" made me think at first that she was disable in some way. Maybe she is just stunted-out by the area's living conditions and ennui... or by the screenplay lackings? The mother seems a real case of Alzeihmer; I would have appreciated less realism here, say a 70 instead of a 90 year old non actress. In any case, the dialogs are so trite that even the nonagenary manages. Nothing seems important or everything has the same importance; the movie has no center or care for the details. Even the sheep are not interested in the food, probably artificial grass.