What is the cost of the American Dream? It’s a question American culture has circled for a century without fully sitting with the answer. MEXICANAMERICAN, the documentary debut from filmmaker Eddie Sánchez, doesn’t circle it. It sits in it — for 98 minutes, with VHS home movies and kitchen-table interviews and the kind of quiet that comes after you’ve asked your parents something you never asked them before.
Sánchez turns his camera on Lalo and Beby, his parents, and asks them to walk him through it: the courtship in Mexico, the decision to leave, the journey across the border, and what their lives looked like once they arrived. The VHS tapes — recordings Lalo and Beby once sent back across the border as a way of “visiting” family they couldn’t physically be with — become the film’s beating heart. A decade of home movies, captured in the image quality of a generation that recorded its memories on magnetic tape because that’s what they had.
“A love letter to those whose sacrifices often go unknown and unnoticed — and a reckoning of what is lost when we don’t ask questions.” — Faridah Gbadamosi, Tribeca Festival
What makes MEXICANAMERICAN remarkable is how much Sánchez trusts the footage. He shot, wrote, and edited the film himself, alongside his brother Eben. It is a family film in the most literal sense — a film made by a family, about a family, that asks what it means to be a family across a border that was never supposed to stay permanent.
Why This Film Matters to The LSMG Ledger
Last Shot Media Group is a Dallas-based independent creative company. Dallas and Austin share more than geography — they share the same demographic truth: that the cities of Texas were built in significant part by Mexican and Mexican-American families whose stories are underrepresented in media. MEXICANAMERICAN is the kind of film we exist to cover.
Eddie Sánchez is also the film’s own press contact, representing himself through Evelia Filmworks. That’s the kind of independent spirit The LSMG Ledger was built to amplify. A filmmaker who made his film himself and is representing it himself at Tribeca, in competition, with no studio infrastructure. That’s the story.
Screening Information
MEXICANAMERICAN screens three times at Tribeca 2026, all at Village East by Angelika in Manhattan. The world premiere is Tuesday June 9 at 5:00 PM. Additional screenings June 10 at 6:00 PM and June 14 at 6:00 PM. Tickets at tribecafilm.com.