Since childhood, Alexandra’s sole obsession has been proving the existence of extraterrestrials. It’s consumed her entire life, lead her to her profession, and bulldozed her every relationship. Working alone in an observatory in the midst of a vicious storm, she discovers a signal from deep space that, if authentic, validates her very existence. With only a limited time to verify her findings, she races against the clock and nature, butts heads with stubborn bureaucrats, and, oh yeah, must decide whether to stay with the work or leave, likely causing this discovery to be ignored, in order to be with her ailing father as he passes away. All of this takes place primarily in a single room, playing out largely in real time.
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On the surface, the choice seems easy, yeah? Screw work, go be with dad, right? To not basically destroys her family and deeply wounds the few remaining people she does care about. What Tinoco and Trepat do brilliantly is lay the groundwork so it’s not such an easy decision. Trepat embodies Alexandra’s internal strife and conflict; she’s messy and pulled in different directions, complicated and driven to the point where she’s burned every bridge and used every last scrap of goodwill. But the film also takes great pains to make it known she’s not a monster. She’s not a good or bad person, she’s fleshed out and authentic and complex in very real, human ways. There are no absolutes, Alexandra is a sea of greys. With such a restrained set up, a movie like this live and dies with its actor, and Trepat delivers an absolutely stunning performance, carrying the entire movie on her back.
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The Antares Paradox is Tinoco’s first feature directorial effort, though he’s done tons of VFX work. If this is an indication of what he can do, he’s someone we should all be paying close attention to. Constantly mounting pressure, an incredible central performance, technical chops for days, and a devastating climax, all add up to something very, very special and well worth getting excited about. [Grade: A]
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