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The Garden Left Behind

It's her life. It's her dream.
2020 | 88m | English

(649 votes)

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Popularity: 0.2 (history)

Details

Traces the relationship between Tina, a young Mexican trans woman, and Eliana, her grandmother, as they navigate Tina's transition and struggle to build a life for themselves as undocumented immigrants in New York City.
Release Date: Aug 28, 2020
Director: Flavio Alves
Writer: Flavio Alves, John Rotondo
Genres: Drama
Keywords new york city, mexico, immigrant, relationship, grandmother, trans woman, gender transition
Production Companies Queens Pictures, Autonomous Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024 (Update)
Entered: Apr 30, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Job
Flavio Alves Director, Screenplay
Àlex Lora Cercos Editor
John Rotondo Screenplay
Koshi Kiyokawa Director of Photography
Frank Dale Arroyo Editor
Kimberly Matela Production Design
Eon Michael Carlin Set Decoration
Everett Clark Costume Design
Steve Iskowitz Costume Design
Angelina Scantlebury Costume Design
Charles Allen Brownley III Sound Recordist
Barbaros Ali Kaynak Sound Editor
Tim Korn Supervising Sound Editor
Name Title
Flavio Alves Executive Producer
Brock Yurich Associate Producer
Adam Beasley Executive Producer
Max Berger Executive Producer
Andrew Daniels Associate Producer
Shea Diamond Executive Producer
Waqas Khan Executive Producer
Kristen Parker Lovell Co-Producer
Devin Michael Lowe Associate Producer
Frances Lozada Co-Producer
Roy Wol Producer
John Flynn Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

screenzealots
7.0

One of the greatest roles the medium of film can achieve is to magnify the voices and stories of marginalized communities. “The Garden Left Behind,” an ambitious film about the transgender experience in America, strives to help all of us understand the human experience — especially when it comes to ... those perceived as “the other.” With a diverse cast of transgender and Latinx actors, this film serves as a great educational tool by allowing the audience to walk a mile in the shoes of another, which in turn helps make the world a smaller, more caring place. The film tells the fictional story of Mexican trans woman Tina (Carlie Guevara), who lives with her kind grandmother Eliana (Miriam Cruz) in New York City. They are undocumented immigrants and are struggling to build a life for themselves in the United States. Tina wants so desperately to quality for hormone treatment so she can fully transition, hoping to be able to fully live the life she was born to live. Tina’s grandma loves her dearly, but sometimes struggles to understand (but she remains fully supportive of her granddaughter). The struggles of daily life of a trans woman are treated with compassion and respect, not negatively nor stereotypical. Director Flavio Alves and co-screenwriter John Rotondo worked closely with the trans community to incorporate concerns and realities from their everyday lives into the story. The result is an original, authentic picture of what it’s like to be transgender in America, and particularly a trans woman of color. We are at Tina’s side as she endures emotional abuse from her boyfriend, verbal threats from strangers, bullying, name-calling, harassment, uncomfortable stares, and the devastation that arises from a life-shattering revelation after she begins the transitioning process. It’s an effective, emotionally devastating way to bridge the gap, as her story is achingly human. The film has attractive cinematography (by Koshi Kiyokawa) and the pacing moves quickly, never taking too long to tell the story. Still, the script tries to include too many hot-button issues like illegal immigration and the lack of health care, but its political awareness should be commended (although the extended scenes from the “Trans Lives Matter” movement feel forced and stall the narrative). The end of Tina’s story is shocking and sad, but it feels all too real. The actual statistics that are shown in the film’s closing credits showing the numbers of violence towards trans women of color are shocking. That’s why representation like this on screen is so important: it opens the door to discussion and acceptance, stimulates understanding, lessens discrimination, and fosters kindness across the globe.

Jun 23, 2021