Miranda Otto and Noah Wyle star in this provocative, if toothless, drama on the precariousness of undocumented immigrant domestic workers.

The life of many an undocumented domestic worker is marked by fear. The threat of deportation may feel remote at times, but it hovers over them nonetheless — and structures their experience in ways both big and small. Exploiting such paranoia, Augustus Meleo Bernstein’s provocative if listless “At the Gates” creates a scenario where a housekeeper and her teenage son must trust her employers when ICE agents (or so they’re told) arrive in search of them both. Aiming to be a tense drama about trust, the film struggles to balance the personal and cultural stakes at the heart of its neat conceit.
When Ana (Vanessa Benavente, a standout) arrives at her employer’s lavish home with her son Nico (Ezekiel Pacheco) in tow, she expects that day to be like many before. She’s worked for Marianne (Miranda Otto) and Peter Barris (Noah Wyle) for months now and takes pride in what she does. Nico may see this stint he’s starting as a stepping stone before he heads to college, but all that comes crashing down with a doorbell ring. It’s the police — or immigration enforcement, specifically. In an instant, Ana and Nico’s world shatters. They’re given a choice: They could head home and risk being caught by ICE officers who are actively looking for them or they can hide out in a makeshift room in the Barris’ basement. They begrudgingly choose the latter.
Related Stories

Generative AI & Licensing: A Special Report

'High Potential' Jumps 220% to 11.5 Million Viewers Across Platforms in Three Days (EXCLUSIVE)
The film’s premise is intriguing. Meleo Bernstein’s original screenplay sets up an intriguing scenario wherein Ana and Nico must lay their entire sense of safety and security in the hands of their employers — an exaggerated version of what housekeepers like Ana do every day. Mother and son have to trust Marianne and Peter wholeheartedly. Their lives depend on it. But what if they’re not telling the truth? Why does this rich couple have a secret hideout that can only be locked from the outside? Are they keeping them safe or are they merely keeping them inside?
Popular on Variety
Nico is rightly suspicious while Ana is unwavering in her conviction that her employers are shielding them from harm. But as the days go by and their every movement is more closely monitored (no staring out windows, no access to their own phones, as security cameras track their every move), the fraught feeling that both families are working in each other’s best interest begins to fray. Could it be that instead of this being a tale of two good Samaritans doing a selfless deed, we’re witnessing a twisted kidnapping story about indentured servitude?
On the strength of that premise of mutual suspicion (per their story, Marianne and Peter are harboring Ana and Nico at their own peril, after all), “At the Gates” might have been a tense thriller anchored by two mutually self-perpetuating tropes, that of the “model immigrant” and the “white savior.” Indeed, a dinner scene where the Barris kids (a teenage girl and a young boy) get to witness their mother unable to distinguish El Salvador from Mexico and later hear Ana telling a harrowing tale of how she first fled to the U.S. after losing her husband to violence, brims with promise the rest of the film cannot sustain.
All too focused on offering in Marianne a portrait of a conflicted woman intent on doing the right thing and thus complicating that latter trope, the film forgets to give Ana an equally complex role to play in her own story (despite the gripping grace Benavente brings to the role). With a languid pace that eventually undercuts the intended tension, “At the Gates” has its heart in the right place in wanting to give a voice to the plight of undocumented domestic workers. But the film, handsomely lensed by DP Alan Torres and featuring an oft-distracting score by Julia Newman, continually finds one too many subplots and ancillary scenes that detract from its would-be gripping, timely setup.
Read More About:
Jump to Comments‘At the Gates’ Review: Politically Conscious Thriller Preys on the Fears of ICE & Deportation
Reviewed online, Oct. 29, 2023. Running time: 97 MIN.
More from Variety
MLB Playoffs 2024: How to Watch Division Series Online
Does Streaming Hurt Theaters? This Survey Says It Helps
How to Watch the WNBA 2024 Playoffs Live Online
Arizona vs. Kansas State: How to Watch the College Football Game Live Online
How Celebrity Reps Are Fighting the Flood of Unauthorized AI Content
Anthony Joshua vs. Daniel Dubois: How to Watch the Boxing PPV Event Live Online
Most Popular
Inside the 'Joker: Folie à Deux' Debacle: Todd Phillips ‘Wanted Nothing to Do’ With DC on the $200 Million Misfire
‘Kaos’ Canceled After One Season at Netflix
‘Menendez Brothers’ Netflix Doc Reveals Erik’s Drawings of His Abuse and Lyle Saying ‘I Would Much Rather Lose the Murder Trial Than Talk About Our…
Kathy Bates Won an Oscar and Her Mom Told Her: ‘You Didn't Discover the Cure for Cancer,’ So ‘I Don't Know What All the Excitement Is About…
Saoirse Ronan Says Losing Luna Lovegood Role in ‘Harry Potter’ Has ‘Stayed With Me Over the Years’: ‘I Was Too Young’ and ‘Knew I Wasn't Going to Get…
‘Joker 2’ Director Says Arthur Fleck Was Never Joker: ‘He's an Unwitting Icon’ and Joker Is ‘This Idea That Gotham People Put on Him…
‘Joker 2’ Axed Scene of Lady Gaga’s Lee Kissing a Woman at the Courthouse Because ‘It Had Dialogue in It’ and ‘Got in the Way’ of a Music…
Andrew Garfield Says Sex Scene With Florence Pugh in ‘We Live in Time’ Went a ‘Little Bit Further’ Than Intended: ‘We Never Heard Cut…
‘Skyfall’ Director Sam Mendes Says James Bond Studio Prefers Filmmakers ‘Who Are More Controllable’: ‘I Would Doubt’ I’d…
Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried to Star in ‘The Housemaid’ Adaptation From Director Paul Feig, Lionsgate
Must Read
- Film
COVER | Sebastian Stan Tells All: Becoming Donald Trump and Starring in 2024’s Most Controversial Movie
By Andrew Wallenstein 3 weeks
- TV
Menendez Family Slams Netflix’s ‘Monsters’ as ‘Grotesque’ and ‘Riddled With Mistruths’: ‘The Character Assassination of Erik and Lyke Is Repulsive…
- TV
‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Part 2 to Air on CBS After Paramount Network Debut
- TV
50 Cent Sets Diddy Abuse Allegations Docuseries at Netflix: ‘It’s a Complex Narrative Spanning Decades’ (EXCLUSIVE)
- Shopping
‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Sets Digital and Blu-ray/DVD Release Dates
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXN%2Fjp%2BgpaVfp7K3tcSwqmiZpGLBqbGMoJitnaNiv6bCyJ6uZmliaIJ4g5NwaG1n