REAL FEELS Keyla Monterroso Mejia (center) stars as the titular character in Valentina, a cinéma vérité style film with a single professional actor interacting with real people, screening as part of the SLO Film Fest. Credit: PHOTO COURTESY OF THE SAN LUIS OBISPO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Tatti Ribeiro directs this tale of Valentina (Keyla Monterroso Mejia), a young woman living on the El Paso-Juarez border whose life is a shambles. She’s broke, has unpaid parking tickets, and is caught in the OmniBase program—a failure to appear/failure to pay system that allows parking fees to compound, potentially leading to arrest and jail. We follow her over 48 hours as she tries to sort out her financial mess, deals with a jerky tow truck driver, and does odd jobs all around town while also meeting family obligations and petitioning the El Paso City Council on behalf of impoverished people caught in OmniBase.

What makes the film so unusual is Mejia is the only professional actor—all other people who appear are El Paso residents, and their interactions are almost entirely unscripted. The handheld camerawork and wandering feel makes Valentina seem like documentary with real and unrehearsed interactions. You really gain an understanding of what life is like in this bustling border town.

VALENTINA
What’s it rated? PG-13
When? 2025
Where’s it showing? Friday, April 24, 7:45 p.m., at the Palm Theatre; and Saturday, April 25, 11 a.m., and Monday, April 27, at 1:15 p.m., at Downtown Centre. Tickets at slofilmfest.org.

Despite grinding poverty and a repressive system, Valentina and the real-life people she meets find joy and meaning in life. The film demonstrates the potency of independent filmmaking. (in English and Spanish; 82 min.) ∆

Local News: Committed to You, Fueled by Your Support.

Local news strengthens San Luis Obispo County. Help New Times continue delivering quality journalism with a contribution to our journalism fund today.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *