Trailers
Description
Something terrible is happening in class 3A at Calmecatl Junior High. No one can leave the classroom until the guilty party is found. This is the device that gives us a glimpse of the ethics, games, esthetics and eroticism of these girl-women. It is not easy to say what the subject is, there are so many: the discovery of sexuality, discrimination, chance, drugs, maternity, traditions, betrayals, power, love. A mural of a complex reality from the point of view of twenty-something women in the skin of 14 to 15 year old girls.
Starring
Awards
Key opinion
Perras is a polarizing psychological drama that divides viewers between those who appreciate its raw, unvarnished depiction of adolescent moral decay and those who dismiss it as an incoherent, pretentious mess. While some praise its character-driven study of teenage girls, many criticize the film for its disjointed plot, lackluster production values, and perceived lack of narrative focus.
| Direction | The film adopts an art-house aesthetic that feels overly pretentious and disjointed to many viewers. | |
| Acting | The performances are inconsistent, with some viewers finding them to be a decent debut, while others find the cast indistinguishable and poorly portrayed. | |
| Screenplay | The plot is widely criticized for being incoherent, underdeveloped, and lacking a satisfying resolution to its central mystery. | |
| Pacing | The film's slow, contemplative pacing is praised by those who enjoy character-focused dramas but criticized as tedious and exhausting by those expecting a traditional thriller. | |
| Ending | The ending delivers a shocking, unpredictable climax that serves as the film's most notable narrative hook. | |
| Emotion | The film leaves a deeply unpleasant aftertaste through its focus on moral degeneration and disturbing behavior, limiting its appeal to a niche audience. |