
A father and daughter journey from Denmark to an unknown desert that exists in a realm beyond the confines of civilization.... (Full plot summary below)
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A father and daughter journey from Denmark to an unknown desert that exists in a realm beyond the confines of civilization.
Leave your thoughts about Jauja.
| Little White LiesDavid JenkinsMiraculous. Blithely does its own thing, but with staggering assurance and artistry. |
| Seattle WeeklySean AxmakerAlonso's films are as much about men moving through the landscape, leaving behind the rules of civilization to become lost in the wilderness. |
| The SkinnyMichelle DevereauxWith its richly saturated, meticulously composed sublime landscapes, this might be the year's best-looking film. |
| Gay City NewsSteve EricksonLike all great films, Argentine director Lisandro Alonso's "Jauja" makes up its own rules. |
| Boston HeraldJames VerniereIf you miss 1980s-era Werner Herzog, see this. |
| Chicago ReaderBen SachsThis fifth feature by the brilliant Argentine filmmaker Lisandro Alonso is his first with professional actors and a period setting, yet it meshes thematically with his other work. |
| Movie MezzanineLuke GoodsellMysteriously opaque and thrillingly spooky, Lisandro Alonso's Jauja evokes what many films aspire to yet rarely achieve: a genuine lucid state of cinema-as-dream. |
| RogerEbert.comMatt Zoller SeitzThe performances mesh beautifully with the filmmaking, which is more keenly attuned to fluctuations in the natural world that all but a handful of modern motion pictures. |
| Paste MagazineDom SinacolaIn his latest feature, the breathtaking Jauja, Argentinian director Lisandro Alonso demonstrates that he is the rare filmmaker who trusts his audience enough to winnow his films down to the bone. |
| Los Angeles TimesRobert AbeleJauja makes one cryptic leap too many at the end, but until then it evocatively confounds. |