• Latest
  • Trending
Cielo Review

Cielo Review: A Divine Journey with a Faulty Destination

The Man Will Burn Review

The Man Will Burn Review: Who Owns the Fire?

Bear Hunting Review

Bear Hunting Review: Fake News in a Very Old Forest

The Alters: Last Variable Review

The Alters: Last Variable Review: Science Leaves Its Feelings in Cryosleep

Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend Review

Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend Review: Strong Fists, Weak Dramatic Impact

Son of the Soil Review

Son of the Soil Review: Zion Takes the Scenic Route to Vengeance

They Fight Review

They Fight Review: André Holland Carries a Story That Will Not Slow Down

Ride or Die Review

Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

Cat Mail Co. Review

Cat Mail Co. Review: Stamping Parcels Loses Its Spark

Murder 101 Review

Murder 101 Review: True Crime Finds Its Conscience at School

A Year in London Review

A Year in London Review: A Romance Stitched Without Feeling

Summer House Season 11

‘Summer House’ Season 11 Cast Confirmed After Batula, Wilson Exits

19 hours ago
David Zaslav

David Zaslav Sells $59 Million More in Warner Bros. Discovery Stock

19 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Summer House Season 11

    ‘Summer House’ Season 11 Cast Confirmed After Batula, Wilson Exits

    David Zaslav

    David Zaslav Sells $59 Million More in Warner Bros. Discovery Stock

    Crystal Lake

    ‘Crystal Lake’ Teaser Reveals Linda Cardellini as Pamela Voorhees

    Avengers Doomsday

    ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ Tickets Go on Sale July 20, Runtime Revealed

    The Haunting Of Hotel Transylvania

    ‘Hotel Transylvania 5’ Sets October 2027 Theatrical Return

    Nansun Shi

    Nansun Shi, ‘Infernal Affairs’ Producer and Hong Kong Cinema Pioneer, Dies at 75

    Justin Baldoni Blake Lively

    Justin Baldoni Fights Blake Lively’s $8 Million Legal Fee Request

    Anya Taylor

    Anya Taylor-Joy Admits She Hasn’t Read the Lord of the Rings Books

    Andy Serkis

    Andy Serkis Defends All-White Cast for New Lord of the Rings Film

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The Man Will Burn Review

    The Man Will Burn Review: Who Owns the Fire?

    Bear Hunting Review

    Bear Hunting Review: Fake News in a Very Old Forest

    Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend Review

    Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend Review: Strong Fists, Weak Dramatic Impact

    Son of the Soil Review

    Son of the Soil Review: Zion Takes the Scenic Route to Vengeance

    They Fight Review

    They Fight Review: André Holland Carries a Story That Will Not Slow Down

    Ride or Die Review

    Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

    Murder 101 Review

    Murder 101 Review: True Crime Finds Its Conscience at School

    A Year in London Review

    A Year in London Review: A Romance Stitched Without Feeling

    Robert Richardson: The White Devil Review

    Robert Richardson: The White Devil Review: Light Cannot Hide the Man

  • Game Reviews
    The Alters: Last Variable Review

    The Alters: Last Variable Review: Science Leaves Its Feelings in Cryosleep

    Cat Mail Co. Review

    Cat Mail Co. Review: Stamping Parcels Loses Its Spark

    We Gotta Go Review

    We Gotta Go Review: Toilet Panic Needs Stronger Systems

    Ascend to ZERO Review

    Ascend to ZERO Review: Every Second Becomes a Weapon

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review: The Slayer Learns to Fly Again

    Moldwasher Review

    Moldwasher Review: Pixel Grime Meets Lo-Fi Calm

    Last Flag Review

    Last Flag Review: Capture the Flag Finds a Clever New Hiding Place

    Echoes of Aincrad Review

    Echoes of Aincrad Review: SAO Finally Finds a Better Player Character

    Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced Review

    Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag Resynced Review: The Jackdaw Rules the Seas Again

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Summer House Season 11

    ‘Summer House’ Season 11 Cast Confirmed After Batula, Wilson Exits

    David Zaslav

    David Zaslav Sells $59 Million More in Warner Bros. Discovery Stock

    Crystal Lake

    ‘Crystal Lake’ Teaser Reveals Linda Cardellini as Pamela Voorhees

    Avengers Doomsday

    ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ Tickets Go on Sale July 20, Runtime Revealed

    The Haunting Of Hotel Transylvania

    ‘Hotel Transylvania 5’ Sets October 2027 Theatrical Return

    Nansun Shi

    Nansun Shi, ‘Infernal Affairs’ Producer and Hong Kong Cinema Pioneer, Dies at 75

    Justin Baldoni Blake Lively

    Justin Baldoni Fights Blake Lively’s $8 Million Legal Fee Request

    Anya Taylor

    Anya Taylor-Joy Admits She Hasn’t Read the Lord of the Rings Books

    Andy Serkis

    Andy Serkis Defends All-White Cast for New Lord of the Rings Film

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The Man Will Burn Review

    The Man Will Burn Review: Who Owns the Fire?

    Bear Hunting Review

    Bear Hunting Review: Fake News in a Very Old Forest

    Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend Review

    Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend Review: Strong Fists, Weak Dramatic Impact

    Son of the Soil Review

    Son of the Soil Review: Zion Takes the Scenic Route to Vengeance

    They Fight Review

    They Fight Review: André Holland Carries a Story That Will Not Slow Down

    Ride or Die Review

    Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

    Murder 101 Review

    Murder 101 Review: True Crime Finds Its Conscience at School

    A Year in London Review

    A Year in London Review: A Romance Stitched Without Feeling

    Robert Richardson: The White Devil Review

    Robert Richardson: The White Devil Review: Light Cannot Hide the Man

  • Game Reviews
    The Alters: Last Variable Review

    The Alters: Last Variable Review: Science Leaves Its Feelings in Cryosleep

    Cat Mail Co. Review

    Cat Mail Co. Review: Stamping Parcels Loses Its Spark

    We Gotta Go Review

    We Gotta Go Review: Toilet Panic Needs Stronger Systems

    Ascend to ZERO Review

    Ascend to ZERO Review: Every Second Becomes a Weapon

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review: The Slayer Learns to Fly Again

    Moldwasher Review

    Moldwasher Review: Pixel Grime Meets Lo-Fi Calm

    Last Flag Review

    Last Flag Review: Capture the Flag Finds a Clever New Hiding Place

    Echoes of Aincrad Review

    Echoes of Aincrad Review: SAO Finally Finds a Better Player Character

    Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced Review

    Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag Resynced Review: The Jackdaw Rules the Seas Again

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Cielo Review

The Drifter Review: Death is Only the Beginning

Death & Taxes Review: The Price of a Legacy

Home Entertainment Movies

Cielo Review: A Divine Journey with a Faulty Destination

Enzo Barese by Enzo Barese
12 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

Cielo opens not with exposition but with a stark, unsettling act. On the high plains of Bolivia, an eight-year-old girl named Santa carries out a plan with chilling resolve. Following a promise made to her mother, Paz, she ends her abusive father’s life with a stone and then tenderly preserves her mother’s body in a barrel of salt.

Her objective is simple in its fantastic logic: she will drive her mother to a place on a map called Heaven and bring her back to life. This grim premise immediately clashes with the sun-bleached beauty of the surrounding landscape. The film’s tone is set in these first moments, signaling a departure from familiar storytelling.

When Santa catches a fish from a lake and swallows it whole, the event is presented with the same straightforwardness as her earlier violence. This is a world where the laws of nature are suggestions, not rules, echoing a deep-rooted Latin American narrative tradition where the miraculous and the mundane are presented as one. It is a dark fable told with the unblinking gaze of a child who sees no difference between the two.

A Divine Road Trip Through a Painted Desert

Santa’s expedition begins in a dilapidated truck, a gift from a local priest whose own conviction has withered. This transfer of a worldly vehicle from a man of flagging faith to a child of absolute certainty is the film’s first significant step into its allegorical road trip.

Cielo Review

Her travels across the Bolivian expanse become a series of strange, episodic meetings, each character representing a different facet of the world she seeks to redeem. Her most memorable encounter is with a troupe of traveling Cholita wrestlers, who discover her and her grim cargo.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Best Horror Movies
    30 Best Horror Movies: The Horror Hall of Fame
  • 30 Best Drama Movies
    30 Best Drama Movies to Watch Before You Die
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best sci fi movies
    30 Best Sci Fi Movies Ever: Gazettely's Ultimate…
  • best fantasy movies
    30 Best Fantasy Movies Ever, Ranked: From…

These women, a vibrant and real-world symbol of indigenous female identity and resilience in modern Bolivia, become her temporary guardians. Their immediate, fierce protection offers a powerful counterpoint to the male authority figures who view her with suspicion. Later, she is questioned by Gustavo, a weary police captain whose cynical worldview is slowly dismantled by the child’s unwavering purpose.

Director Alberto Sciamma and cinematographer Alex Metcalfe treat the Bolivian setting as a primary character. The immense, white salt flats and treacherous, winding mountain roads are not just backdrops; they are active spaces that shape the story’s mythic quality.

The camera often frames Santa as a tiny figure against an overwhelming landscape, emphasizing the scale of her faith against the indifference of the world. The visual palette is saturated with electric reds, oranges, and blues drawn from the region’s folk art, giving the film a palpable, dream-like texture that feels both ancient and vividly present.

This visual storytelling reaches a peak in a harrowing sequence where the wrestlers’ bus inches along a perilous mountain pass. The palpable tension and vertigo induced in this scene ground the film’s spiritual elements in a visceral, physical reality, showing that the path to Heaven is fraught with earthly dangers.

The Unblinking Heart of the Miracle

The film’s entire fantastical structure rests on the shoulders of its young lead, Fernanda Gutiérrez Aranda. Her performance as Santa is a marvel of quiet confidence and a clever subversion of the “magical child” archetype common in Western cinema.

Where such characters are often portrayed as ethereal, knowingly wise, or sentimentally pure, Santa is practical, grounded, and almost unnervingly direct. She approaches every event, from reviving a dead condor to facing down armed men, with a calm, matter-of-fact seriousness that makes the impossible feel strangely plausible. Her hopefulness is not sweet or sentimental; it is resolute and powerful, an active force that reshapes the world around her.

This resolute performance is what anchors the film. Santa is the story’s fixed point, a small sun whose gravity pulls others into her orbit. The supporting characters, like Fernando Arze Echalar’s Captain Gustavo, reflect this effect. His arc provides a stand-in for the audience’s own journey from disbelief to acceptance.

His transformation from a cynical lawman into a humbled follower validates Santa’s power in a tangible way. The wrestlers’ relationship with her is different; their acceptance is immediate and non-judgmental. They see her not as an anomaly to be questioned but as a spirit to be protected.

Their solidarity adds a distinct layer of commentary on female intuition and community in a world governed by brittle male skepticism. Every character’s interaction with Santa serves to amplify the central idea: her miracle is not just what she does, but how her presence forces others to confront the limits of their own reality.

A Faltering Faith in the Final Act

For much of its runtime, Cielo presents its supernatural elements as observable facts, a bold choice that asks the audience to engage on the film’s own terms. Miraculous healings and conversations with a fish are not explained because, in a world governed by Santa’s faith, they require no explanation.

This ambiguity is a strength, positioning the film’s core ideas outside the framework of organized religion and within the more personal, potent realm of individual belief. Santa’s conviction is the engine that drives the entire story forward, making a case that faith is a force capable of bending reality itself.

Yet, as her trek nears its supposed destination, the film’s narrative certainty begins to waver. After maintaining such a specific and potent tone, the final act loses its momentum and its nerve. The resolution lacks the force of the preceding events, feeling muddled and tonally confused.

The issue is a sudden abandonment of its established language. The film switches from a grammar of quiet, profound mystery to one of loud, explicit declaration. A closing sequence, a choreographed dance set to a Bolivian rap number, is a particularly jarring choice.

It feels disconnected from the carefully built world and attempts to state a theme that the rest of the film so elegantly implied. The story builds a complex and difficult premise around trauma, grief, and a child’s radical response, but the ending sidesteps these heavy implications.

The film stands as a strikingly original work, rich with visual imagination, but its ambitious spiritual inquiry is hindered by an unsatisfying final message that does not honor the profundity of its own questions.

Cielo is a drama, fantasy, and mystery film. It is set in Bolivia. The movie premiered at Fantasporto in Portugal in March 2025. It was released in the United Kingdom in 2025 and also known as “La Boliviana”. The film is distributed by Film Seekers. 

Full Credits

Director: Alberto Sciamma

Writers: Alberto Sciamma

Producers: John Dunton-Downer, Alexa Waugh, Bettina Kadoorie, Alberto Sciamma, Paola Gosalvez

Executive Producers: Gareth Jones, Razwana Akram

Cast: Fernanda Montserrat Gutiérrez Aranda, Fernando Arze Echalar, Cristian Mercado, Carla Arana, Mariela Salaverry, Juan Carlos Aduviri, Luis Bredow

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Alex Metcalfe

Editors: Orlando Torres

Composer: Dave Graham, Cergio Prudencio 

The Review

Cielo

6.5 Score

Cielo is a visually stunning and fiercely original film, anchored by a remarkable lead performance. For most of its runtime, it is a potent and unforgettable dark fable, operating with the strange, unwavering logic of a dream. Its ambitious spiritual trek is captivating, presenting a unique vision of faith and resilience. This brilliance is significantly undercut by a final act that loses its way. The unsatisfying and tonally jarring conclusion prevents the film from realizing its full, profound potential, leaving the impression of a beautiful, broken miracle.

PROS

  • A strikingly original and unpredictable story that blends dark themes with childlike faith.
  • Stunning cinematography that vividly captures the mythic quality of the Bolivian landscape.
  • A remarkable and grounding lead performance by Fernanda Gutiérrez Aranda.
  • A bold and fascinating tone that treats the supernatural with matter-of-fact seriousness.

CONS

  • The narrative loses focus and momentum as it approaches its conclusion.
  • An unsatisfying and tonally jarring ending that feels disconnected from the rest of the film.
  • The resolution feels underdeveloped, failing to address the story's heavier ideas adequately.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Alberto SciammaCarla AranaCieloCristian MercadoDramaFantasyFeaturedFernanda Gutiérrez ArandaFernando Arze EchalarJuan Carlos AduviriLuchadora FilmsLuis BredowMariela SalaverryMystery
Previous Post

The Drifter Review: Death is Only the Beginning

Next Post

Death & Taxes Review: The Price of a Legacy

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Rogue Trooper Review

    Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Westies Review: Hell’s Kitchen Serves Another Cold-Blooded Crime Saga

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • I’m Not Afraid Review: Childhood Pays for Adult Desperation

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Alpha Review: YRF Finds New Heroes, Then Repeats Old Habits

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • One Piece: Heroines Review: Nami Takes the Runway

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1173 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Sentinels Review: Super Soldiers Sink Into the Mud

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

The Man Will Burn Review
TV Shows

The Man Will Burn Review: Who Owns the Fire?

15 hours ago
Ride or Die Review
TV Shows

Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

17 hours ago
House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 4 Review
TV Shows

House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 4 Review: Daeron Learns the Wrong Lesson

1 day ago
The Dark Review
TV Shows

The Dark Review: Fear Watches from the Window

2 days ago
Chainsmoker Cat Review
TV Shows

Chainsmoker Cat Review: The Sad Cat Beneath the Stench

3 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely