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Bates Film Festival – American Pachuco: The Legend of Luis Valdez

DATE AND TIME
Sunday, May 17 2026
1:45pm
doors at 1:15
TICKETS

FREE; RSVP encouraged
Presented by

dir. David Alvarado
92 min. | 2026

The Bates Film Festival is a Maine-based gathering where students and attendees engage in civic-minded conversations and experience thought-provoking movies in community. The 2026 BFF will focus on the arts and how their representation in film brings individuals together, promotes mutual respect and understanding, and heightens civic engagement.

All events are free and open to the public in order to welcome a broader audience. Our festival is unique in that it is organized and programmed by Bates College students under the direction of Professor Jon Cavallero.

American Pachuco: The Legend of Luis Valdez (dir. David Alvarado, 2026)

American Pachuco: The Legend of Luis Valdez explores the life and work of Luis Valdez, a playwright, a filmmaker, and the founder of El Teatro Campesino, whose work has helped to shape Chicano cultural expression in the United States. Through archival footage and interviews, the documentary shows how Valdez used theater and film as tools for storytelling, political expression, and community building, from the farmworker movement to works like Zoot Suit

I’m from California’s Central Valley, and at times it felt like I was watching the history of home unfold on screen. That connection made me think about what it means to tell stories that come from real communities and the ethical responsibilities those storytellers carry. At the same time, the film shows how Valdez’s work brings people together through shared history and collective memory, and how storytelling can create a real sense of belonging. His approach is grounded in community and accountability, creating space for people to tell their own stories on their own terms.

We chose to program American Pachuco because it shows how art can bring people into conversation with each other, while also being a form of cultural expression and political speech. Valdez’s work makes space for communities to see themselves on their own terms, while also inviting others into that history. More than anything, the film asks you to think about the stories you’re watching and your place within them. (Written by Alexis González, ’26)

Awards: Audience Award, U.S. Documentary, Sundance Film Festival; Nominee, Grand Jury Prize, Documentary, Sundance Film Festival, 2026.