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Estamos Aquí: A Community Documentary Directed By Bryan Mendez

This movie will be played on:

2019 BLOCK A

BLOCK A | FREE
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1
10:00AM – 12:00PM

THE LOCAL FILMS

All screenings will take place at
COLLEGE OF THE DESERT | POLLOCK THEATER
43500 Monterey Ave, Palm Desert, CA

THIS IS A FREE SCREENING BUT YOU MUST

RESERVE YOUR TICKET HERE:

Synopsis:

A dry lakebed, dead fish, abandoned buildings – these are the images most often associated with the Salton Sea. Less known is the story of the people living near the sea and what the worsening environmental crisis means to them.

A team of young filmmakers who grew up a few miles from the Salton Sea seek to highlight community voices and the future of Eastern Coachella Valley communities in a new 30-minute documentary, “Estamos Aquí: A Community Documentary,” produced by Coachella Unincorporated, the first and only youth media program based in the Eastern Coachella Valley.
By interweaving images from the Salton Sea and daily life in the rural communities near its northern shore, the film reveals that for thousands of people, the Salton Sea is an important community symbol.

The Salton Sea is California’s largest inland body of water. Created by accident starting in 1905, the water briefly supported tourism and resort towns until agricultural runoff made the water less hospitable. Today, the shoreline is gradually receding, exposing chemical sediment easily picked up by wind and carried to nearby homes.

Government agencies have proposed various solutions to the Salton Sea crisis, but nearby residents often feel ignored. They say it’s been difficult to get information about what’s happening to the sea.
“When you think about the Salton Sea and the environmental issues here, I want you to think about the people who live here,” said Olivia Rodriguez, who wrote and co-produced the documentary. “The birds and fish are important, but this community has a story to tell. It’s been our home, our parents immigrated here, and it has been the home of the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians much longer than that.”

Rodriguez and director/co-producer Bryan Mendez said that while growing up in the Eastern Coachella Valley, the sea was a key part of local identity that contributed to the area’s unique and often peaceful natural beauty.

“It’s sad knowing that at some point it may all go away and we’re not going to be able to enjoy the sea and the views,” Mendez said. “The views are the reason some people bought a home here. For my family, it was because it was affordable.”

The filmmakers’ close ties to the community gave them access to people and scenes not captured in other documentaries. The film, the first on the subject created by young people who grew up by the sea, invites audiences to experience this uniquely local viewpoint.

Director Biography – Bryan Mendez

Bryan Mendez is from Desert Shores, Calif. Bryan, the son of immigrant farmworkers, is dedicated to celebrating and uplifting the stories of people in his community. Bryan believes in being a resource for other young people in the Eastern Coachella Valley. A graduate of Desert Mirage High School, Bryan is always ready to help young people learn how to use a camera to create videos and photos. Bryan’s dream for his community to see a day when all young people in the Eastern Coachella Valley can pursue their dreams.

Bryan has been a reporter with Coachella Unincorporated, the first and only youth media program based in the Eastern Coachella Valley, since 2015. He is best known for his visual story, “The Last Skaters of North Shore” and for his award-winning photography featuring farmworkers in the Eastern Coachella Valley.

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