Miami Herald

Rotting in the Sun

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At first glance, the protagonis­t of the enjoyable sex-and-death-and-Instagram dark comedy “Rotting in the Sun” would appear to be its director: the 44-year-old Chilean-born filmmaker Sebastián Silva (“Nasty Baby,” “Crystal Fairy”), here playing a severely depressed version of himself. He enters the movie in an existentia­l funk, his head full of suicidal thoughts and his sad-eyed, strikingly handsome face buried in a copy of E.M. Cioran’s “The Trouble With Being Born.” Soon he flees his Mexico City apartment for a gay nudebeach paradise, but Sebastián already seems dead to life’s pleasures, whether he’s taking in a sunset or snorting ketamine. Even the many, many naked men parading into his line of sight (and ours, thanks to Gabriel Díaz Alliende’s unabashedl­y horny, often crotch-level camerawork) seem to fill him with more gloom than delight.

If you crave happier company, you’re in luck: Enter the comedian and social media personalit­y Jordan Firstman, also playing a fictionali­zed version of himself, though not a severely depressed one. An exuberantl­y narcissist­ic human firecracke­r, Jordan makes a dynamic first impression on Sebastián — let’s just say he nearly kills them both — and thereafter remains a irrepressi­ble, sometimes unwitting agent of clothing-optional chaos. Fate brought them together, Jordan claims, and he insists that they work together on the show he’s writing. The details of the project are vague, but it will involve turning a spotlight on some of his kajillion Instagram followers, the ones who hang on every pointless life update and semi-inspired comic bit he uploads.

The show sounds dreadful, but its working title (“You Are Me”) and passthe-mic premise do raise a fascinatin­g question: Is Jordan in fact the real protagonis­t of this movie? The argument could be made, especially when Jordan, keen to collaborat­e with Sebastián in every sense, follows him home to Mexico City, only to stumble on a mystery of ludicrous yet weirdly plausible proportion­s. I won’t say more (“Rotting” doesn’t need spoiling), except to note that Jordan swiftly seizes control of the narrative and turns amateur detective, interrogat­ing Sebastián’s landlord, Mateo (Mateo Riestra), and housekeepe­r, Vero (Catalina Saavedra), and siccing his fellow Instagram sleuths on a puzzle to which the audience has already been given the solution.

And so “Rotting in the Sun” unfolds like an influencer-skewering episode of “Columbo,” if “Columbo” had smartphone­s, jaggedly kinetic visuals and unsimulate­d gay sex scenes. The last have predictabl­y dominated headlines about the movie since it premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, though Silva, who co-wrote the script with

Pedro Peirano, could hardly be accused of trading in shock value. Even when he strategica­lly frontloads the full-frontal at that beach getaway, his aim is less to eroticize than to normalize the sight of proudly, casually bared flesh. He treats sex as both life-animating force and banal matter-offact reality, a wellspring of nonstop hilarity and soulcrushi­ng disappoint­ment alike.

Sebastián’s suicidal ideations — he can’t stop Googling “phenobarbi­tal” — suggest a deep familiarit­y with that disappoint­ment. Jordan, by contrast, is an eternal optimist; there’s no frustratio­n that a random hook-up and a few thousand likes can’t chase away. What holds the movie together, for all its jittery syntax and rugpulling midpoint twist, is the furiously combative, contrapunt­al energy that courses between Silva and Firstman. Both actors gamely mock themselves and each other, upending our ready-made assumption­s about the value of the obscure, self-serious artist relative to the vacuous, hugely popular influencer. (Naturally, it’s only Sebastián’s reluctant mention of a potential Jordan Firstman collaborat­ion that stirs any excitement at a depressing HBO pitch meeting.)

As ever, Silva’s filmmaking — formally rough on the surface, carefully worked out underneath — depends on the steady upending of expectatio­ns. Social media is phony but potentiall­y revealing. Bodies are hot and sexy until they’re gross and inconvenie­nt. Jordan is insufferab­le, the worst kind of self-entitled Ugly American, but also endearing, perceptive and admirable in his tenacity. What happens to him and Sebastián is harrowing, then funny, then shocking, then sad, then somehow all the funnier for it. A master at orchestrat­ing domestic chaos in close quarters, Silva turns Sebastián’s under-constructi­on apartment building into a den of vice, a warren of secrets and a locus of those unspoken class tensions and disparitie­s that have always festered away in the director’s work.

At times, “Rotting in the

Sun” plays like a Silva greatest-hits compilatio­n, laced with references to everything from the greatoutdo­ors trippiness of “Crystal Fairy” (explicitly cited by Jordan himself) to the self-skewering satire of “Nasty Baby.” The most significan­t callback, however, is to Silva’s 2009 drama, “The Maid,” starring Saavedra as a housekeepe­r waging quiet and not-so-quiet war against her longtime employers. She brings a different but similarly subversive spirit to the role of Vero, who initially registers as a kind but hapless peripheral figure, but who increasing­ly becomes a thorn in Jordan’s side as she refuses to let him seize the upper hand.

Vero, infuriatin­g and sympatheti­c by turns, has little money and no social media profile to speak of. In a movie defined by its

MPA rating:

(In Spanish and English, with English subtitles)

Running time:

How to watch: Now in theaters and streaming on Mubi Friday bizarre meta-flourishes and bacchanali­an pleasures, she’s hardly the first person you notice. But by the end of “Rotting in the Sun,” you may well conclude that this desperatel­y sad, shifty-eyed woman — unnoticed, unloved and wholly unforgetta­ble — has been the true protagonis­t all along.

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 ?? COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE TNS ?? Catalina Saavedra, left, and Jordan Firstman star in Sebastián Silva’s ‘Rotting in the Sun.’
COURTESY SUNDANCE INSTITUTE TNS Catalina Saavedra, left, and Jordan Firstman star in Sebastián Silva’s ‘Rotting in the Sun.’

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