The opening scenes of Lake Tahoe veer between long, sunbaked shots of a tiny town in the Yucatan and moments of complete blackness; the only real action in the filmā€™s first half-hour (a minor car crash) takes place during one of these blackouts. And then we follow Juan (Diego CataƱo) as he meets peopleā€”an infirm old man, a karate fanatic, a comically inept teenage motherā€”while searching for a new part for his damaged Nissan. The camera, at first, seems indifferent to Juan: Itā€™s pulled back so far from the action that shot after shot resembles an early side-scrolling Nintendo game, where we see a static set and the entirety of Juanā€™s body as he walks from the left of the screen to the right.

Eventually, as Juan walks around town, accruing a long list of tasks he must complete before his car can be fixed: To get the part, he must visit a friend to borrow the cash, but before he can do that, he must babysit for a while, and before he does that, he has to watch a mechanic eat his breakfast. The pacing here is important; you canā€™t watch Lake Tahoe in a hurry. Youā€™ve got to follow behind it patiently.

The movie spans only 24 hours, but itā€™s the right 24 hours. Along the way, we learn that Juan wants to fix more than just his car; heā€™s trying to figure out how to repair a broken life and determine his role in putting his family back together. For the patient viewer, the rewards are many: Fernando Eimbcke, the director of the quiet, gentle Duck Season, controls his filmā€™s pauses and silences with the assuredness of a great symphony orchestra conductor, making Lake Tahoe a perfectly refreshing, reinvigorating pause button on a noisy summer movie season.