What We Leave Behind

2022

Action / Documentary

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 100% · 9 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 92%
IMDb Rating 6.7/10 10 179 179

Plot summary

At the age of 89, Julián Moreno takes one last bus ride to El Paso, Texas, to visit his daughters and their children – a lengthy trip he has made without fail every month for decades. After returning to rural Mexico, he quietly starts building a house in the empty lot next to his home. In the absence of his physical visits, can this new house bridge the distance between his loved ones?

Director

Top cast

720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
651.9 MB
1280*720
Spanish 2.0
NR
Subtitles es  us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 10 min
Seeds 1
1.31 GB
1920*1080
Spanish 5.1
NR
Subtitles es  us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 10 min
Seeds 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by paul-allaer 7 / 10

Deeply personal and moving family tribute

As "What We Leave Behind" (2022 release; 71 min) opens, we hear a voice-over (which turns out to be the director) talking to an old guy (turns out to be her grandpa), as he gets ready to take the bus back to Mexico. Due to his poor health, the bus company won't allow him to gravel by himself, so his granddaughter (the director) accompanies him. They arrive in San Juan Del Rio, in rural Central Mexico, and we get to know other family members. At this point we are less than 10 min into the documetnary.

Couple of comments: this is the latest film from wireter-producer-director Iliana Sosa, who has a long track record focusing on cross-border immigration issues ("Detained In the Desert", "Building the American Dream"). Here she goes very personal, focusing on her ailing grandpa who first started coming into the US in the mid-1960's. Sosa doesn't rush anything, and lets the old man do much of the talking, as he reflects on a life (almost) gone by, his erstwhile hopes and fears, and what he hopes to leave behind. The documentary observes the day-to-day, mostly slow life in rural Mexico along the way. For many of us (or certainly for me) it feels like a different universe altogether, while realizing that these are decent people, making the best of a hard life they've been given. There are no "political" statements in this documentary, which is just as well as the tales we hear from the old man and his family provide all the context we need.

"What We Leave Behind" premiered on Netflix several weeks ago and I finally got around to watching it last night. So glad I did. If you are in the mood for a deeply personal and moving "human" story that happens to involve cross-border immigration between the US and Mexico, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.

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Reviewed by sylviavaldez-45311 9 / 10

Abuelo

This movie was so simple however it captured something I can relate to when going to Mexico with my abuelos. To me, it captured something in their faces without them not saying much. Her Tio Jorge's expression, the sadness on his face had me crying. I wondered, why is he so sad, what is he thinking.

Iiliana's abuelo mentioned how he wanted his family together and how he thought of them. His daughter, Sosa's mom caring for her dad. Again, I related to this movie being first generation Mexican and going to my grandparents every summer; watching my grandfather work so hard in his pueblo, which by the way is close to San Juan Del Rio. How grandfather told us stories of the town as this abuelo did to Iliana. Iliana's mentioned, the castle mountain and the 100-door house had me intrigued. If we can share all the stories our grandparents shared with us from their town, how amazing that would be.

Just seeing Iliana's abuelo fry a simple egg and how he loved his coke just like my abuelo did. I could not stop crying after the movie ended. I am crying now just writing this. I guess it hits everybody differently but Iliana if you read my review, thank you for sharing your documentary as it brought back so many memories for me. How I miss my viejito, my grandfather/abuelo. Many people want a better life for their family and what they do till their last breath but yet, they miss their tierra/land, their pueblo..

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