| 
        |||||||||||||
| Juan Pablo Cestero | Ezequiel | |
| Lautaro Rodriguez | Mono | |
| Patricio Rodríguez | Juan Ignacio | |
| Juan Barberini | Chino | |
| Luis Margani | Abuelo de Juan Ignacio | |
| Antonia De Michelis | Abuela de Juan Ignacio | |
| Tomás Agüero | Cutu | |
| Cecilia Cósero | Madre de Ezequiel | |
| Luciano Suardi | Padre de Ezequiel | |
| Malena Irusta | Hermana de Ezequiel | |
| Felipe Gonzalez Otaño | Martin | |
| Franco Marani | Sergio | |
| Germán Frías | Dario | |
| Denis Corat | Profesor de Taekwondo | |
| Carmela Sandberg | Profesora | |
| Juan Ignacio Farías | Vecino | |
| Gala Núñez | Amiga de Juan Ignacio | |
| Agustín Bel | Alumno | |
| Carolina Erlich | Médica | |
| Juan Pablo Tunesi | Profesor de educación fisica | |
| Damián Borda | Hombre del sueño | 
| Director/Choreographer | 
              
  | 
          ||
| Producer | 
              Daniel Chocron
               Alberto Masliah  | 
          ||
| Writer/Composer | 
              Marco Berger
               | 
          ||
| Cinematography | 
              Mariano De Rosa
               | 
          ||
| Music | 
              Pedro Irusta
               | 
          
| 
             | 
          
             Ezequiel, a sixteen-year-old gay teenager in his sexual awakening, meets a boy of twenty-one. They quickly start a relationship and the situation unravels unexpectedly.  | 
        
            
  | 
          
            
  | 
        ||||||||||
            
  | 
        |||||||||||
SPOILER ALERT. I usually studiously avoid spoiler in my published notes. But this film concludes with a cliché denouement -- suicide. It need not have been a happy ending, a least as it relates to this particular narrative, but suicide is a cheap trick, often used in early gay literary expressions. Walker-Dack [QueerGuru] says that "The ending thankfully puts us back on track." He's wrong. It certainly does not! We've come much to far in our liberation journey to see suicide as freedom.