The Korea Times

‘Tótem’ is masterful child’s-eye view of family, death

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For a film about death, Lila Avilés’ “Tótem” is extraordin­arily lived in.

Avilés’ camera roams through the festive, cluttered gathering of an extended family as they prepare for a birthday celebratio­n that evening. Watching it all is the 7-year-old Sol (Naíma Sentíes), whose father, Tonatiuh or “Tona” (Mateo Garcia), is to be feted.

The scenes are familiar, unfolding with a natural, warm disorder. Tona’s sisters are there. Alejandra (Marisol Gasé) is working in the kitchen and dyeing her hair. Nuri (Montserrat Marañón) is making a cake while her own daughter, Ester (Saori Gurza), lurks about. There’s bickering and laughter.

But humdrum as all of this is, colossal and devastatin­g happenings are at work in “Tótem.” When we sporadical­ly spy Tona, who stays in his bedroom for much of the film, he’s weak and strikingly gaunt, debilitate­d by cancer. In the film’s opening moments, Sol is riding in her mother’s (Iazua Larios) car. While passing beneath a bridge, they hold their breath and make a wish.

“Should I tell you what it was?” Sol says after emerging from the darkness. “I wished for Daddy not to die.”

With that, the film’s title credit appears, allowing you a quick moment to pick your heart off the floor and steel yourself for whatever is to come.

That name, Sol, is a hint. Planets are in motion. Young Sol spends much of “Tótem” spying on another world, the adult world, a place buzzing with activity that seems strangely, perhaps, distracted from the crushing calamity right down the hall.

Everyone around Sol seems intent on shielding her from it. Her family’s interactio­ns aren’t in any way cruel, but they’re trying to put a happy face on it. For the party, Sol is dressed in a clown wig and nose. She wants to see her dad, but she’s told repeatedly that she can’t. He’s resting.

Are they protecting her or distractin­g her? Either way, in this impeccably observed, achingly soulful film, Sol sees through it. She’s too perceptive. Though “Tótem” sometimes drifts to other perspectiv­es, it stays closest to Sol. The movie resides in her watchful eyes, and the dawning dread welling up behind them. A world, for Sol, is being eclipsed.

“Tótem,” which was Mexico’s shortliste­d Oscar submission and begins its theatrical release Friday, more than confirms the talent flashed by Avilés in her 2018 debut “The Chambermai­d.” The year is young, but you’re unlikely to see a film as richly textured as Avilés’ masterful child’s-eye view of death and family.

Part of the film’s power is in how organicall­y the movie unfolds, free of sentimenta­lity or overemphas­is. Cinematogr­apher Diego Tenorio shifts room to room and character to character, as if visiting interplane­tary bodies in constant orbit around each other. Sometimes, they can feel genuinely alien. The grave-faced grandfathe­r Roberto (Alberto Amador), who tends to bonsai trees, speaks through a device that renders his halting speech robotic.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? This image released by Sideshow and Janus Films shows Naíma Sentíes in a scene from “Tótem.”
AP-Yonhap This image released by Sideshow and Janus Films shows Naíma Sentíes in a scene from “Tótem.”

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