Roma is Cuarón's first film since Y tu Mamá también, released in 2001, to take place in a recognisably everyday setting. It trades in space, wizarding schools (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban), and dystopian wastelands (Children of Men) for a rigorously defined, deeply personal time and place: the megalopolis of Mexico City between the summers of 1970 and 1971, as experienced by a middle-class family and, most notably, its indigenous live-in maid Cleo (Yalitza Aparicio).
This is a setting Cuarón knows intimately, and it shows. Born in 1961, the son of a well-to-do nuclear physicist from the Mexican capital, the events which roughly bookend his latest film – the 1970 FIFA World Cup and the infamous "Hawk Strike" massacre – will likely have had a significant impact on him.
Maybe that's why he is working with more creative freedom than ever before here: apart from directing Roma, he also wrote, produced, edited, and – in an unprecedented move – shot it, foregoing the services of long-time collaborator and three-time Oscar winner Emmanuel Lubezki (Children of Men, The Tree of Life, Gravity, Birdman). The difference is surprisingly noticeable. Whereas Lubezki is a master of the free-flowing camera that effortlessly glides through three-dimensional space, Cuarón, though equally fond of long takes, is almost a minimalist: he shoots in expressive black-and-white; he pans along straight lines, turns the camera up, down, left, and right in simple 90-degree angles, keeps it perfectly still to zero in on a detail – a shattered window, a pensive Cleo, a wailing student protestor cradling a fallen comrade.
Roma follows a year in the life of Cleo (Yalitza Aparicio), who works as a maid for a bourgeois family in Mexico City. © Netflix |
The world Roma conjures up feels authentic, almost viscerally lived-in. This is Cuarón's Ulysses, his People on Sunday; and 1970s Mexico City is his 1900s Dublin, his late-1920s Berlin. It is told in indelible moments and images, which demand to be seen, heard, and felt in a movie theatre (which is ironic, given Netflix co-produced) – and which to recount in detail cannot hope to do justice to their breathtaking beauty.
★★★★★
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