
A private investigator in Chile hires someone to work as a mole at a retirement home where a client of his suspects the caretakers of elder abuse.... (Full plot summary below)
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A private investigator in Chile hires someone to work as a mole at a retirement home where a client of his suspects the caretakers of elder abuse.
Leave your thoughts about The Mole Agent.
| The PlaylistJonathan ChristianThe Mole Agent is a perfect film. From a technical and emotional viewpoint equally, The Mole Agent possesses no flaws. Yes, as with every documentary, manipulation is openly displayed and validity can always be questioned, but The Mole Agent dissuades any inkling of pessimism or negativity through its unabashed sincerity. |
| IndieWireEric KohnThe Mole Agent may not look like a documentary, but it builds to a poetic finale enmeshed in emotional authenticity. |
| Slant MagazinePat BrownThat Maite Alberdi’s camera itself is present in The Mole Agent as a quasi-ethical concern suits the way Sergio, as he shuffles through the home’s hallways, gradually comes to be uncomfortable with his own surveillance. |
| The Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeA refreshing, beautifully made documentary set in a nursing home under suspicion of elder neglect, Maite Alberdi's The Mole Agent begins with its tongue in cheek but grows quite moving by its end. |
| Screen DailyAllan HunterWhat begins as a bit of a lark blossoms into a moving reflection on old age and loneliness that should strike a chord across the generations. |
| RogerEbert.comNick AllenFor however quaint and sporadically quirky it is, The Mole Agent is an earnest look at old age, and a community full of people just like Sergio. |
| The Film StageMatt CipollaThe Mole Agent may stumble through some of its choices at first, but it sticks the landing by finding a cogitative dissonance and refusing to solve it. |
| The New York TimesGlenn KennyThe movie’s straddling of the dramatic and the documentary forms is unsettling. Unless you unquestioningly accept its method, this chronicle can look like a glaring invasion of privacy. But the film’s people are moving, and the payoff is compassionate, humane and worth heeding. |
| CineVueChristopher MachellThe fear of old age’s erosion of our faculties, our agency and our relevance is a potent, almost paralysing one: the way we perceive and treat our elders invariably reveals something about ourselves. In her charming and off-kilter documentary The Mole Agent, Chilean director Maite Alberdi confronts that fear literally through the eyes of her subject. |
| Film ThreatNoah SchwartzUnfortunately, due to its limited premise, The Mole Agent never goes beyond showing the problem of loneliness. There no solutions, even if viewers like me interpreted some from watching the film. Nevertheless, through a unique premise and an engrossing style, The Mole Agent shines a light on a part of our society that we don’t talk or think about enough. |