TIFF: Alfonso Cuarón's "Roma" Triumph
Tuesday, September 18, 2018 at 1:23PM
NATHANIEL R in Alfonso Cuarón, Best Picture, Cinematography, Oscars (18), Reviews, Roma, TIFF

by Nathaniel R

Alfonso Cuarón's jaw-dropping Roma is inspired by his childhood in Mexico but it's no traditional memoir. Rather than focusing on his own life, he spins a slow-burn fictional memoir, imagining the emotional space occupied by the live-in maid/nanny who helped raise him...

The protagonist Cleo is played simply but beautifully by first-time actress Yalitza Aparicio, in both Spanish (with her employer family) and Mixtec (the language of indigenous Mesoamericans, with her co-workers). Cleo is beloved by the family she works for, especially the children. Though the parents also clearly like her, the stressed-out mother (fine work from Marina de Tavira) and a largely absent doctor father, they don't seem fully aware of the ways in which they also exploit her. She's part of the family until she isn't... it's her day off until they reflexively ask her to do things and so on. But she's a dutiful employee. Well, mostly. That dog poop she never cleans up is one of the movie's many hyper-specific details that bring both deepy enjoyable humor and pathos along with them as they reoccur. Another recurring bit that lands every time -- the family's wide car having trouble in the narrow driveway.

Though Cleo has one very real plot point worry (an unplanned pregnancy), Roma isn't really a character study of this woman so much as an observation of her daily routines. Cleo's meekness in life and for the cameras might not work for all viewers, but it worked for this one: not every person in real life is as aggressive and outgoing as self-actualized movie characters!  For this observational/passive reason I continue to worry about Netflix as Roma's home. The film is very much an immersive cumulative experience rather than a traditional story. In the first 10 minutes, for example, nothing happens at all but for hypnotic credits, opening titles against a wet floor, and prolongued takes of Cleo cleaning house and doing laundry. Not the grabbiest of beginnings for the click-away sampling culture of streaming! But in a movie theater, Roma is spellbinding. That's due to the control and precise depth of feeling that the long takes and wide shots often conjure as we attempt to absorb all the life and personal drama within these grandly recreated dioramas of 1970 in Mexico City.

There are so many exceedingly memorable images: a mad communal scrambling during a forest fire, a family trip to the beach, Cleo's boyfriend Fermin (Jorge Antonio Guerrero) practicing martial arts in the nude, a trip to an astronaut movie (a nod to Gravity perhaps?). Etcetera...

Though there is a dramatic story arc, both for the family and for Cleo, Roma functions most superbly as deeply human vignettes of everyday life. As with Cuarón's international breakthrough Y Tu Mama Tambíen, the picture doubles as a political portrait of his home country, or in this case Mexico City specifically. It's Cuarón's best and most soulful film since that triumph (which was, perhaps not coincidentally, his last Spanish-language film) and as bravura a feat of 'how'd he do that?' technical virtuosity as his most acclaimed English language pictures Gravity and Children of Men. Every frame is a painting. Every deep bustling tableau is filled with humor, beauty, drama, and untold other stories that could have been their own movie. See it on the biggest screen you can find because the image-making is something else.

Alfonso Cuarón on set with Yalitza Aparacio

GradeA/A- 
Oscar Chances: Across the board contender but will probably be most competitive in Best Director, Best Foreign Language Film, and within technical categories. 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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