Which Way Home
Which Way Home | |
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Directed by | Rebecca Cammisa |
Produced by | Rebecca Cammisa |
Cinematography |
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Edited by |
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Music by | James Lavino |
Production company | |
Distributed by | HBO Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages |
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Which Way Home is a 2009 documentary film directed by Rebecca Cammisa. The film follows several children who are attempting to get from Mexico and Central America to the United States, on top of a freight train that crosses Mexico known as "La Bestia" (The Beast). Cammisa received a Fulbright Scholar Grant to make the documentary in 2006. The film premiered on HBO on August 24, 2009.
Synopsis
[edit]Each year, thousands of Latin American migrants travel hundreds of miles to the United States, with many making their way on the tops of freight trains. Roughly five percent of those traveling alone are children. As the United States continues to debate immigration reform, the documentary Which Way Home looks the issue through the eyes of children who face the harrowing journey with enormous courage and resourcefulness.
Characters
[edit]- Kevin: A fourteen-year-old boy trying to reach America to be able to support his mother back in Honduras. He also leaves attempting to leave his step-father, with whom he has a bad relationship. Eventually, he finds out that life there is equally difficult in different ways.
- Fito: A thirteen-year-old boy trying to find work in America. He leaves his hometown in Honduras with Kevin, also hoping to find a better life away from his grandmother and absent mother.
- Yuriko ("El Perro"): A seventeen-year-old boy, who leaves Chiapas, Mexico in hopes of finding a family that will adopt him in the US. Having no family, he lives on the streets begging in Chiapas and strikes up a close friendship with Fito on the journey to the border. He struggles with an addiction to huffing glue.
- Juan Carlos: A thirteen-year-old boy from Guatemala who leaves his mother to try and find work in America. He is abandoned by his father, and attempts to reach New York, where his father went.
- Olga and Freddy: Two friends on a journey to cross the border to find their family. Olga travels to Minnesota to find her mother while Freddy travels to Illinois to find his father. They were both ages nine years old traveling from Honduras to the US.
Reception
[edit]Critical response
[edit]Which Way Home has an approval rating of 100% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 8 reviews, and an average rating of 7.79/10.[1]
Awards and nominations
[edit]Won
[edit]- Emmy, 2010 - Outstanding Informational Programming-Long Form[2]
Nominated
[edit]- Academy Award 2010 - Best Documentary Feature
- Spirit Award 2010 - Best Documentary[3]
Soundtrack
[edit]An excerpt from the soundtrack (heard at 0:07:10 and again at 1:06:00) by James Lavino has been adopted by the Turner Classic Movies network to accompany the introduction trailer to feature film presentations in 2016.
References
[edit]- ^ "Which Way Home". Rotten Tomatoes.
- ^ Sundance.org/ Archived 2010-12-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Spirit Awards website
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Which Way Home on HBO
- Which Way Home at IMDb
- Which Way Home at Rotten Tomatoes
- http://whichwayhome.net/awards.html
- 2009 films
- 2000s English-language films
- 2000s Spanish-language films
- 2009 documentary films
- American documentary films
- Documentary films about illegal immigration to the United States
- Mr. Mudd films
- Documentary films about children
- Documentary films about rail transport
- 2009 multilingual films
- American multilingual films
- 2000s American films
- Films scored by James Lavino
- English-language documentary films
- Biographical documentary film stubs
- Spanish-language American films