El espíritu de mi mamá

El espíritu de mi mamá ("The Spirit of my Mother") is a Spanish language feature film by Ali Allie about Garifuna woman's journey home to Honduras to embrace her cultural roots. It premiered at SXSW in 1999 and later at Dawn Breakers International Film Festival. It was released on DVD in 2002 by Vanguard Cinema and was the first fictional movie featuring Garifuna actors in leading roles. It features an extended religious ritual segment with traditional Garifuna songs and traditional punta dance.

El espíritu de mi mamá
DVD cover
Directed byAli Allie
Written byAli Allie
Produced byAli Allie
StarringJohana Martinez
Release date
  • September 1, 1999 (1999-09-01) (MFF)
Running time
78 minutes
CountryHonduras
LanguageSpanish

Synopsis edit

A meditative and dramatic tale of a young woman's remarkable journey to her forgotten homeland. Sonia is a single mother living in Los Angeles, far removed from her Garifuna—West African, Arawak and Carib Indian—roots. Haunted by memories of an American soldier she once loved and dreaming of her dead mother, Sonia searches for answers among the mundane landscape, but finds few. After getting fired from her job as a nanny, Sonia journeys to Honduras to grant her mother's request to perform a ceremony that will let her rest in peace. As her elders teach her the sacred Garifuna ritual, Sonia begins to embrace her own nearly forgotten and rich cultural roots, as well as her identity as a mother to a daughter of her own. Set amidst the Honduran landscape and punctuated by traditional Garifuna music, Spirit of my Mother is a story about one woman's transformation as she learns to embrace the past and move gracefully into the present. -- N. Isaacs, Mill Valley Film Festival

Theatrical Screenings edit

World Premiere Program Notes edit

"An altogether original take on the mother/daughter story, The Spirit of My Mother (El espíritu de mi mamá) is a unique film essay. Blending narrative and documentary techniques, director Allié tells the story of one woman’s quest to reach out to her mother, and to the ancestral traditions and endangered culture of the Garifuna." -- Heather Courtney, SXSW Film Festival

Reviews edit

"An ethnographic dramatic debut which makes up in sincerity what it obviously lacked in available coin... paints vivid portrait of the culture" -- Variety[1]

References edit

  1. ^ "Spirit of My Mother". Variety. Retrieved 2015-10-15.

External links edit