Roma premiered on 30 August 2018 at the75th Venice International Film Festival, where it won theGolden Lion. It began a limited theatrical run in the United States on 21 November 2018, before streaming onNetflix in the U.S. and other territories starting on 14 December 2018.[8][19][20]
In 1970, Cleodegaria "Cleo" Gutiérrez is aMixtec live-in maid in an upper-middle-class household inMexico City'sColonia Roma neighborhood. The household consists of the mother, Sofía; the father, Antonio; their four school-aged children, Pepe, Sofi, Toño and Paco; and Sofía's mother, Teresa. Antonio, a medical doctor, often leaves for business conferences, but Sofía's distressed reactions to his absences suggest he is having an extramarital affair.
Meanwhile, Cleo believes she might be pregnant. She tells her boyfriend, Fermín, who pretends to be supportive but immediately abandons her at a movie theatre. She nervously reveals her news to Sofía, who provides emotional comfort and takes her to the hospital, confirming her pregnancy. Sofía then takes Cleo and the children to a family friend'shacienda for New Year celebrations. Recent tensions over land in the area arise, and a large forest fire erupts that the partygoers help extinguish.
Back in the city, Cleo sees Antonio and a young woman flirting on the street. She looks for Fermín, traveling to an impoverished district on the edge of the city, where she finds him training at a military-style camp run byProfessor Zovek. Fermín denies that her baby is his, threatening to beat Cleo and their child if she talks to him again.
Ribera de San Cosme avenue and Lauro Aguirre street, where theCorpus Christi massacre occurred. The building that was the furniture store and school in the film is now a gymnasium.
Cleo returns to the city, and the increasingly distraught Sofía tries unsuccessfully to conceal her husband's infidelity from their children. With the baby almost due, Teresa takes Cleo shopping for a crib downtown. Suddenly a student protest outside the store turns intothe Corpus Christi massacre of 10 June 1971 as a paramilitary group,Los Halcones ("the Falcons"), attacks the protesters. The militants chase a student into the store and murder him. Fermín, appearing as one of Los Halcones, points a gun at Cleo and Teresa before wordlessly exiting. Then Cleo'swater breaks. The violence in the streets slows traffic and her attempt to get to the hospital. When she arrives, Antonio briefly appears, reassures her, then makes an excuse to leave. She cries in agony as her baby girl is deliveredstillborn.
Later, Sofía takes Cleo and the children on a family outing to the beaches atTuxpan. Sofía tells her children that she and their father are separating and that the outing is giving him time to collect his belongings from their home. At the beach, a strong current almost drowns Sofi and Paco, but Cleo wades in and saves them, despite not knowing how to swim. Sofía and the children affirm their love for Cleo, all of them holding each other and crying, while Cleo confesses that she did not want her baby to be born. The group returns home to find the house reorganized, and Cleo prepares a load of clothes for washing.
22 Tepeji Street, Colonia Roma – the house where the film was shot21 Tepeji Street, Colonia Roma – the original house of Cuarón's family, located opposite the filming location house
On 8 September 2016, it was announced thatAlfonso Cuarón would write and direct a project focusing on a Mexican family living in Mexico City in the 1970s. Production was set to begin in fall 2016[21] by his production company,Esperanto Filmoj,[22] andParticipant Media. The film was produced by Cuarón,Gabriela Rodríguez, andNicolás Celis. Filming took place from 27 November 2016 to 14 March 2017. Cuarón said he "just wrote the script without looking back. I started page one, I finish it, I never read it again as a whole. I never share it with anyone."[23]
Roma was shot in sequence, whichYalitza Aparicio, who plays Cleo, said helped her. She was most terrified by the scene on the beach, as she—like her character—could not swim.[24] Before being cast, Aparicio, who had recently completed graduate training inpreschool education, had no acting experience or formaltraining in acting. She has joked that the only "acting" she has ever done was lying to her parents and teachers.[25]
Filming took place on location throughoutMexico City, as Cuarón felt shooting on soundstages would be difficult for first-time actors.[26] The movie theatre serving as a recurring location was theTeatro Metropólitan, where Cuarón'sY tu mamá también premiered in 2001.[26]
On 1 November 2016, the crew ofRoma was the target of a robbery. According to the studio, "two women were hit, five crew members were hospitalized, and cellphones, wallets, and jewelry were stolen" during the attack. The crew reportedly arrived to set up filming for the day when a group of city workers approached the crew and tried to shut down filming. The crew said they had permission to film, but the workers persisted and a brawl broke out between the groups.[27][28][29][30]
Plaque at Tepeji 22 house commemorating it as a filming location
In April 2018, it was announced thatNetflix had acquired the film's distribution rights.[31] Netflix movie chief Scott Stuber acquired the rights based on 12 minutes of footage he was shown.[32]
A teaser trailer was released on 25 July 2018.[33]
AfterRoma was nominated for Best Picture at the91st Academy Awards,AMC Theatres andRegal Cinemas both issued statements thatRoma would not be part of the lineup at either chain's annual Best Picture showcase. AMC said this was because it never received a license from Netflix to screenRoma in its theaters. Both theaters chains have refused to screen films from Netflix due to their policies that require a minimum of 90 days betweentheatrical release and home viewing.[42]
The film's eligibility for the Academy Awards was a matter of controversy, since despite its limited theatrical release, many believed it to have been made for home viewing.[43] In March 2019,Steven Spielberg expressed disapproval of streaming films being eligible for Academy Awards,[44] and the timing of his comments led many to believe they were a response toRoma, though he did not mention the film by name.[45]
The film received the biggest promotional campaign in Netflix's history, with anywhere from $25 million to $50 million in advertisements (Netflix insisted on the former figure and its rivals on the latter). One unique tactic included sending out thousands of six-poundRomacoffee table books (worth $175) to awards voters, which led a consultant to say "the shipping charges cost more than some movies' advertising budgets".[46]
Netflix has not publicly disclosed box-office figures forRoma, but sources deduced that the film made $90,000–120,000 from three theaters in its opening weekend, 23–25 November, and $200,000 over the five-day Thanksgiving frame, including selling out theaters in Los Angeles and New York City. Had the results been officially reported, its approximate venue average of $66,600 would have ranked among the best ever for a foreign-language film.[47][48] In its second weekend of theatrical release, the film expanded to 17 theaters.IndieWire estimated the film grossed $110,000 from four of them, including selling out in San Francisco, and that the film would "easily be the best grossing subtitled film" of 2018.[49] In its third weekend, the film made another estimated $500,000 from 100 theaters, for a running total of $900,000.[50]
Despite being released on Netflix on 14 December, the film expanded to 145 theaters and grossed an estimated $362,000 for a four-week total of $1.4 million.[51] It made another $300,000 the next week and $150,000 the week after that.[52][53] By its ninth week of release, the film had made an estimated $2.8 million.[54] In the weekend following the announcement of its 10 Oscar nominations,Roma grossed another $175,000 from around 80 theaters, pushing it past $3 million, the first foreign-language film to do so domestically sinceIda in 2013.[55]
Onreview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes,Roma holds an approval rating of 96% based on 409 reviews, with an average rating of 8.9/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Roma finds writer-director Alfonso Cuarón in complete, enthralling command of his visual craft—and telling the most powerfully personal story of his career."[56] OnMetacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 96 out of 100, based on 50 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[57] It is the 56th highest-rated film of all time on the site, and the best-reviewed of 2018.[58][59]
InThe Guardian,Peter Bradshaw wrote: "Roma is thrilling, engrossing, moving—and just entirely amazing, an adjectival pileup of wonder. He has reached back into his own childhood to create an intensely personal story."[60]Manohla Dargis ofThe New York Times called the film "an expansive, emotional portrait of life buffeted by violent forces, and a masterpiece" and praised Cuarón's use of "intimacy and monumentality to express the depths of ordinary life".[16]
Slavoj Žižek argued that people were appreciating the film for the wrong reasons, claiming that people were appreciating Cleo's grace without seeing how she must break free from the moral constraints placed upon her.[61]
The film received 10 nominations for the91st Academy Awards, includingBest Picture—tying withThe Favourite as the most-nominated film. It is the first film distributed primarily by a streaming service to be nominated for Best Picture.[65] It was tied withCrouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) for the most Oscar nominations received by a film not in English untilEmilia Pérez, in French, received 13 in 2025.[66] It won three Academy Awards,[67] includingBest Foreign Language Film, becoming the first Mexican film to win this honor.[68]
The February 2020 issue ofNew York listsRoma as one of the Best Movies That Lost Best Picture at the Oscars.[73] In June 2025, the film ranked 46th onThe New York Times's list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century" and was one of the films voted for the "Readers' Choice" edition of the list, finishing at number 124.[74][75] In July 2025, it ranked 21st onRolling Stone's list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century".[76]
On 15 November 2019, it was confirmed thatRoma would be receiving aDVD andBlu-ray release fromThe Criterion Collection, marking the first time a Netflix original film was added to the library, and one of the rare times that Netflix had permitted one of their films for physical media release.[77][78] Netflix described the announcement as "such an honor".[79] To coincide with the Criterion Collection release, in February 2020, Netflix released a behind-the-scenes documentary namedRoad to Roma.[80]
^abDargis, Manohla (13 December 2018)."'Roma' Review: Alfonso Cuarón's Masterpiece of Memory".The New York Times. Retrieved29 December 2018.[Roma] centers on a young Indigenous woman who works as a maid for a middle-class white family that's falling apart.