Lucrecia Martel gave further evidence with this film that she is one of the world's most interesting directors. Her subsequent work (including 'Zama' and 'The Headless Woman') has confirmed her status.
'Holy Girl' makes good use of close-ups and sidelong glances, and the acting is as much about non-verbals as about the script.
The heated atmosphere of sexual tension brings out the irreconcilable differences between the world of the adolescents and the world of the adults.
Yes, I’ll admit I fell asleep on first viewing (it’d been a long night and it’s not a knockabout thrillfest!) but when I went back to “La Nina Santa” in a more alert frame of mind I was impressed by the unique atmosphere of the film. The hotel setting becomes almost a character in its own right, with cramped corridors, flimsy plywood doors and a chronic lack of privacy; the director jams people into the background of even the most intimate scenes and clamorous background noises drown out conversations . As for the message of the movie, take some hard-line religious teaching, mix with teenage sexual curiosity and a bit of middle-aged frottage and this is the result. Everyone knows exactly what they should do, but no-one can quite manage to live up to their high moral ideals. Bit like life really.