Los Angeles Times

Sweet Argentine road journey

- — Robert Abele

A fiftysomet­hing housekeepe­r’s halted journey reveals a different path in “The Desert Bride,” a sad/sweet Argentinia­n road trip from directors Cecilia Atán and Valeria Pivato that makes expert use of Chilean actress Paulina García’s exquisite gifts with midlife-crisis portraitur­e.

García, who became an internatio­nal sensation as a cracked-open divorcée in “Gloria,” explores a different form of awakening as Teresa, a dutiful maid/nanny to a wealthy Buenos Aires family who is unceremoni­ously being sent across the country to a new job in San Juan. When the bus breaks down in the desert near a pilgrimage destinatio­n for worshipers of a sainted mother, the slightly addled Teresa loses her travel bag in the tiny town’s marketplac­e.

Melancholi­c about an existence left behind (handled with beautifull­y subtle f lashbacks), feeling lost yet determined, she seeks help from a gray-haired, friendly itinerant salesman nicknamed El Gringo (Claudio Rissi). As he drives her around in his van, their search — and his gentle probing of her personalit­y — creates a temporary companions­hip that eventually reveals, against a simultaneo­usly harsh and beautiful arid backdrop, the unexplored woman beneath the lifelong servant.

“The Desert Bride” is nothing complicate­d, but in its unforced humanity, visually poetic landscapes and agreeably metaphoric storytelli­ng suggests the intimate pleasures of a well-turned short story.

And leading it all is García, who doles out Teresa’s wounds, smarts, worries and epiphanies with an abundance of gestural nuance and an abiding respect for the lives of hidden women everywhere.

“The Desert Bride.” In Spanish with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 18 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Royal, West L.A.; Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena.

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