


The Grateful Dead may be dead, but Deadheadism lives on in the global “Let’s try Ayahuasca, ‘shrooms, (hallucinogenic) sage and toads” set — the “consciousness” pathfinders among us.
Well, the idle, entitled and easily bored among us, anyway.
“Wetiko” is a short, strange trip into the land of the Maya and the toads that you’re just supposed to lick, man. It’s about a young man of Mayan ancestry lured into delivering toads to an “Empire of Love” commune founded by a South African cult leader in the mountainous, cavernous back country of Mexico.
It’s “inspired by a true story,” but really, what is “truth?” In the cinema, that’s a slippery concept. In cults, it’s whatever Dear Leader says it is.
Aapo (Juan Daniel García Treviño) doesn’t wrestle with deep thoughts like that. He works in his mother’s pet store and patiently listens to her explain the restrictions on toad sales and toad “use” to the slim, sexy customer (Dalia Xiuhcoatl) who flashes a lot of cash in an effort to “rent” toads when buying some is out of the question.
Her local shamanka’s name is all Mom needs to hear to agree to the cash deal. But our customer uses her feminine wiles to talk Aapo into “delivering” the toads. He, like his mother, knows how to “milk” them? Right?
Next thing we know Aapo’s ripped-off some yankee tourist’s Honda 250 and screwdriver-started his way into the back country. He figures he’ll deliver the toads, making sure Yavetzi the shamanka is around to handle them, collect the cash and maybe ogle — and more — the female acolytes of the Empire of Love.
The bearded Afrikaans, English and Spanish speaking Zake (Neil Sandilands) is a dictionary of New Age doublespeak, psychobabble and gobbledegook. He talks up the “portals of remembrance” and “the interfade” to his “star being” acolytes — with some new paying customer “Tiktok shaman” influencers on board for a special “Moon” ceremony.
He doesn’t want to hear Aapo is “just the delivery boy, not the medicine man.” He wants the kid to milk the toads. And maybe “listen for the sound of our ancestors, calling us home.”
The Maya’s ancestors? Zake’s South African. Patronizing contempt for “native” people is in his DNA.
“They don’t know they’re special. That’s exactly what MAKES them special!”
Zake, his bait Luz (Xihcoatl), Ms. “perfect abs” muscle Sasha (Bárbara de Regil) and “climatologist turned influencer” Frankie (Jordan Barrett) and assorted Mayans named Maria or Felipe seem determined to pull this ceremony off. As Aapo is drugged, threatened, robbed and injured, we wonder about his role in this “ritual” and if he told Mom he wouldn’t be home for dinner.
Writer-director Kerry Mondragón maintains a sinister tone through much of “Wetiko,” and we fear for Aapo the moment he gets on that bike that he steals. These cultists have heat-vision goggles for chasing escapees through their caves and firearms along with a lot of airy-fairy sales pitches in their “free yourself” mantras.
Mondragón’s script strains to deliver anything particularly surprising — a bug in the ear calamity, the repeated suggestions of “We have no secrets here” and what might happen to one’s tongue if the wrong secret is exposed.
I liked the ironic needle-drop of The Tremeloes’ one-hit in the opening and finale. But the odd bit of distorted lens tripping or heat-vision chasing doesn’t pay off, and there’s no attempted visualization of the “whiteout” nature of toad toxin drug trips.
The logic of it all — Mayans repeatedly warn Aapo not to “stay for the ceremony — works. And Sandilands makes a decent enough archetypal cult king.
“It’s OK, Luz. I talk to God!“
But sinister as this often feels, the pedestrian direction, sloppy confusion of “frogs” and “toads” and the third act’s parade of perfunctory script beats bogs the film down. “Wetiko” never quite escapes the feel of genre pic that doesn’t quite come off.
Rating: unrated, violence, drug abuse, nudity, profanity
Cast: Juan Daniel García Treviño, Neil Sandilands, Dalia Xiuhcoatl, Jordan Barrett and
Bárbara de Regil
Credits: Scripted and directed by Kerry Mondragón. A Dekanalog release.
Running time: 1:31






























