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    World Cinema

    ‘Romería’ Review: Family Lies and a Videotape

    Kevin ParksBy Kevin ParksJune 25, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Romería
    Llúcia Garcia and Mitch Martín in "Romería." (Photo: MK2 Films, 2025).
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    What do we owe the dead? And what do the dead owe us? Often, those meaty, existential questions are easy to flick away — I’d rather think about what’s for lunch — but Carla Simón’s swoony, loosely-autofictional “Romería” forces engagement as a matter of necessity. In three feature films, Simón (“Alcarras”) has repeatedly turned the lens on her own history, and she looks even harder here. In “Romería,” Marina (Llúcia Garcia), a young film student, slashes through the secrets and confusing half-truths surrounding the hush-hush circumstances of her parents’ deaths. Excavating the dead, it turns out, isn’t the act of voyeurism or blasphemy that some in her family might imply. For them, it would be easier to look away. Simón — through Marina — holds the gaze and digs into an open wound, blurring the line between expositional naturalism and outright myth-making. 

    Preparing for university, Marina hits a snag when a government office insists that she’ll need family confirmation of her father’s death, and his relation to her (“Can’t we just add an asterisk?”). The bureaucratic flub hardly flusters Marina. In fact, Garcia imbues in her an unflappability and sideways smirk that suggests she’s retaining everything for future material. Simón’s episodic script credits her mom’s diary (similar to Marina, Simón’s own parents died when she was young), and the film’s first three acts play out like a live-action personal essay. Introducing complicated family creatures and pairing emotionally-charged conflict with surprising flights to humor or fantasy, “Romería” conjures Alice Rohrwacher (“La Chimera,” “Happy as Lazzaro”), although Simón subdues the dosages of whimsy and post-adolescent mischief. 

    A Generational Echo Chamber

    Simón has insisted  that “Romería” is a “fictional creation … rooted in my experience.” And yet a documenterian’s approach forces some distance from what otherwise might be an agonizingly intimate narrative. It’s tragic enough that Marina can hardly remember her parents, but it’s her pursuit of honesty that rattles, infuriates, and motivates her. Marina’s aunts and uncles speak in code and contradict each other, creating more questions than answers. Chasing what she doesn’t know on foot and boat, camera in tow, Marina pieces together that her parents were addicted to heroin (“Horse”) and possibly died of AIDS. Only, no one can seem to agree on dates and facts or deliver a consistent message to Marina. Instead, she hears hurtful barbs (“My mom said to not touch you”) and finds herself right in the middle of a generational echo chamber of buried grief and collective anger.

    Far from a by-the-book bildungsroman, “Romería” (the term, according to Simón, “is used to designate the pilgrimage of the faithful to a shrine or hermitage to pay homage to a religious figure.”) zags in a dreamy fourth chapter. Marina isn’t playacting as deity when, in the final act, the young dead lovers are brought back to life. Here, it’s experimental filmmaking that jolts the structure, an admirable risk that doesn’t quite land since what plays out is limited in its imagination and character-building. Mom and dad — played, respectively by Llúcia Garcia and Mitch Martín, who also plays Marina’s cousin — sun-bathe, make out, and tie off in the glorious Galician mountains. Shot by legendary Cinematographer Hélène Louvart (a frequent Rohrwacher collaborator), the grainy, poetic style outweighs the substance (no heroin pun intended), although this showstopping detour is a logical step on Marina’s mental mission. 

    A Film Grounded in Melancholy

    Romería
    Llúcia Garcia in “Romería.” (Photo: MK2 Films, 2025).

    Still, the pared-back melodrama and laughable micro-aggressions (Abuela to Marina: “You look nothing like your mother”) grounds “Romería” in a melancholy that’s appropriate for a film told in the first person perspective of a young adult/artist who’s both in mourning and searching. Shifting the emphasis of an earlier question: what do we owe the dead? Simón, through on-screen surrogate Marina, allows symbols and imagery to take hold of the story when words and/or memory fail. Marina, then, calls it like she sees it, summoning the dead to help her understand who made her, so she can credibly remake them on her own terms. Looking to the past, Marina takes what she gets and creates the rest, paying respect to the dead, staging a commendable pilgrimage into her own hazy future. 

    Carla Simón’s “Romería” opens in New York theaters on June 26th.

    Carla Simón death Germany Llúcia Garcia loss Mitch Martín Spain world cinema
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    Kevin Parks

    Kevin is a freelance writer and film critic who lives in New York. His favorite director is Robert Altman and he dearly misses Netflix's delivery DVD service.

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