

Bruno's plan to win back his ex-girlfriend hits a snag when he becomes attracted to her boyfriend.
Direction
Berger's lingering gaze turns every shared beer into erotic warfare.
Acting
Vignau's stunted masculinity crumbles in real time, excruciating and hot.

Director
Marco Berger
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Part of Argentina's 'New Queer Cinema' wave, Berger pioneered slow-burn male desire years before Call Me By Your Name made it mainstream.
The swimming pool scene was shot in actual freezing water; Vignau's shivering is real, not acting.