Motel Destino (2024)

Direction: Karim Ainouz
Country: Brazil 

After experiencing Hollywood last year with the period drama Firebrand, filmmaker Karim Ainouz (Madame Satã, 2002; Invisible Life, 2019) returns to Brazil to helm Motel Destino, a mundane and sexually-charged neo-noir thriller that plays like a haunting phantasmagoria. While the script itself lacks depth, the film benefits from its sensory overload, visual experimentation, and a Coen Brothers-inspired score that evokes sinister western landscapes. 

Living in Ceará, Heraldo (Iago Xavier) plans to move to São Paulo but must first complete one last job for drug kingpin and local artist Bambina (Fabíola Líper). When things spiral out of control, he takes refuge in a seedy sex motel, aided by its owners: the restless Dayana (Nataly Rocha) and her volatile, voyeuristic husband, Elias (Fábio Assunção). 

There’s no pretentiousness or ego in the trio’s performances, and enough tension sustains interest until the film’s ultimately disappointing ending. Motel Destino is a vicious piece of work from a director unafraid to expose the primal, darker instincts of his characters. Unfortunately, this stylized erotic thriller is undermined by clumsy dialogue and a hastily executed conclusion. It offers a shallow cinematic experience that may not leave you breathless, but its darkness lingers like cement, and the tension between its sleazy content and neon-lit aesthetics is precisely where its power resides.

Babygirl (2024)

Direction: Halina Reijn
Country: USA

Babygirl, an erotic psychological drama written, directed and produced by actress turned director Halina Reijn (Bodies Bodies Bodies, 2022), feels pedestrian and unexciting. The film follows Rory Mathis (Nicole Kidman), a powerful CEO of a New York robotics company specialized in logistics innovation. Frustrated by the lack of sexual stimulation in her marriage to filmmaker Jacob (Antonio Banderas), Rory embarks on an illicit affair with her much younger intern, Samuel (Harris Dickinson), who seems uncannily attuned to her desires. As their relationship deepens, Rory's vulnerability takes over, leading to chaos and loss of control.

Babygirl vacillates in a sexual game, which, not being new, can be fetishistically real. However, the story winds down as it develops, being pushed into ridiculousness in its final segment and ultimately failing to create a positive impact. Reijn seems uncertain about the film’s direction—wavering between drama, thriller, eroticism, and the bizarre—while her characters remain similarly unsure of whether they seek dominance or submission. 

Visually, the film offers little of note aside from a vividly trippy nightclub scene. The poorly crafted dialogue and inconsequential details further cloud a story already plagued by repetition and artificiality. Performances are uneven: Kidman commands the screen with intensity, Banderas delivers a weak and often laughable portrayal, and Dickinson strikes an awkward middle ground, exuding misplaced confidence without leaving a lasting impact. 

Despite its provocative premise, Babygirl never delivers the emotional payoff it seems to promise, leaving viewers waiting in vain for something truly gripping or transformative.