Absent () is a 2011 Spanish-language romantic thriller film directed by Argentine director Marco Berger. The film centers on a recently engaged, 30-something male swimming instructor who is thrown into emotional turmoil as he repress his desire for his 16-year-old male student, who shows sexual interest in him, and engages in overt advances towards him.
The story is told by Sebastián (Carlos EchevarrÃÂa), a high school sports coach who becomes the object of student and athlete MartÃÂn's (Javier De Pietro) affection. Sebastián tries to keep MartÃÂn at a distance, but at the same time, wants to be kind and nurturing. MartÃÂn goes to great lengths in his attempt to get closer to his coach. When MartÃÂn injures his eye during swimming, Sebastián initially takes him to the hospital; after treatment, Sebastián offers MartÃÂn a ride home. However, MartÃÂn was supposed to spend the night at a friend's house, so no one is expecting him to come home that night, thus he spends the night at Sebastián's house. Things come to a head when Sebastián realizes that he was being lied to, and punches MartÃÂn in the face. He is not angry from disgust or for being the object of MartÃÂn's desire, but rather because MartÃÂn's dishonesty could potentially cost the coach his job, or worse. Offended and feelings rejected, MartÃÂn taunts his teacher, telling him to call the police and suggesting it would cause greater problems. Later, MartÃÂn accidentally falls from a roof to his death after retrieving a neighbor's football, and Sebastián finds himself filled with remorse.
The director is vague on certain plot points; the last images, for example, portray Sebastián gently kissing MartÃÂn on the lips. It is not made clear whether this actually happened, is a memory, or only occurred in one of their imaginations. It is also unclear whether or not MartÃÂn accidentally fell to his death, or whether it was suicide, driven by his teacher's rejection. The viewer is kept contemplating if a romantic relationship had occurred, and if it did, if it is immoral in itself, regardless of age differences or one-sided pressure.
When the film won the "Teddy Award for Best Feature" by the Teddy Award Independent Jury at the Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale), the judging committee praised it as a film with "an original screenplay, an innovative aesthetic and a sophisticated approach, which creates dynamism. A unique combination of homoerotic desire, suspense and dramatic tension."
During the Berlinale, The Hollywood Reporter published a review stating: "Despite its original twist on the tired pedophilia topic, Absent skirts the fringes of dull and would be commercially dismissable, were it not for the edgy mixing job and hyped-up soundtrack that together create a sense of artificial excitement. (...) The small cast is well-chosen and de Pietro, in his first film role, is a real discovery who opens up his character of Martin in ever surprising ways."