Roma
Director: Alfonso
Cuarón
Distributed
by: Netflix
Released:
November 2018
Country: Mexico
I was thinkin'
that maybe I'd get a maid
Find a place nearby for her to stay
Just someone to keep my house clean
Fix my meals and go away
Find a place nearby for her to stay
Just someone to keep my house clean
Fix my meals and go away
--A Man Needs a Maid,
Neil Young
Being a live-in maid seems like a
pretty thankless job—I know I couldn’t do it.
First of all, I’m a slob, so my method of cleaning would be a lot of
peering into rooms and saying, “Good enough.”
Also, when I cook I do a lot of tasting, so I think my employer would
end up having to deduct from my paycheck to compensate for the free food. But more importantly, it must be difficult in
terms of getting attached to the family you work for, as it is for Cleo, in the Mexican Best Foreign Film of 2018, Roma.
Roma is
the story of one maid, named Cleo, in an upper-middle class neighborhood in
Mexico City. Cleo works for a family with small
children, with the husband, a noted doctor, being mostly absent, and his wife Sofia
resenting him for it. Cleo isn’t
particularly pretty or smart, but she works hard and clearly cares about the
kids. She is part of their lives and
part of the family.
The film originates from
the mind of Alfonso Cuarón, who is telling the story of his maid as he was
growing
up in Mexico. Cuarón is best known to
American audiences for his visually stunning but light-on-plot film Gravity from 2013. Roma
is a little more character-driven than that film, but as far as the aesthetics
go, I found the film to be too cute by half.
The movie is in black-and-white, and I'm not sure why. It made things seem more dated than the 1970
Mexico that is its setting. Also, Cuarón
goes a bit Kubrick from time to time, with long, long shots of nothing
happening. Sometimes this can be
visually interesting, like the shot of the family garage’s floor during the
opening credits. But too often I found
myself yelling a Monty Python-ish “Get on with it!”
Yalitza Aparicio as Cleo; Marina de Tavira as Sofia, her employer |
There isn’t much plot in
Roma, but there doesn’t need to be. Cleo
is a likeable character who shows strength and forbearance despite the
challenges thrown at her, and you can’t help but root for her. And when she sees dog poop on the garage
floor, she cleans it up and doesn’t say, “Good enough.”
Cleo and the family |
The Title: Roma is the neighborhood in Mexico City,
somewhat upscale but on the decline in 1970, when this movie is set. The area is now a sort-of trendy hipster
place, with art galleries and restaurants.
Culture: The story takes place during a period of
political stress in Mexico, and the latter portion of the film includes rioting
that took place in the early 1970’s.
Cleo has a relationship with an unemployed dimwit who has been training
with Los Halcones, a quasi-military group who thuggishly kept the peace for the government by using kung-fu moves and by using violence in general.
My dog and I could have used Cleo recently |
More interesting is Cuarón’s pop culture references. The movie
features a variety of Mexican pop songs that were popular at the time, and we
learn that even in Mexico, folks were putting Jesus Christ Superstar on their turntables. But what
comes through most is Cuarón’s love of the movies. Two key scenes occur
at movie theaters, as Cleo and her boyfriend take in
La Grande Vadrouille, a popular 1966 French comedy; and with the kids she sees Marooned, a 1969 American drama about
astronauts. Both movies feature an abandonment of one sort or another, (and
one of the astronauts has a suspicious and odd resemblance to George Clooney, who
starred in Gravity for Cuarón a few years ago).
Agenda danger: Speaking of the theme of abandonment, Roma features two male characters that
heinously abandon their families. Men
don’t come out looking too good in this film, seemingly incapable of fulfilling
their paternal responsibilities. Perhaps
this is why, after all, a man needs a maid.
Best Picture that year: Green Book
Rating: For all the hype, with Cuarón
winning Best Director and the film itself nominated for Best Picture (and the
movie also won for Best Cinematography), I was a little underwhelmed. But there was a charm to characters, the
female ones anyway, that made it worth watching. And if you have Netflix, this one is
something you should make time for.
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