My Family: Mi Familia
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Gregory Nava
Jimmy Smits
Edward James Olmos
Esai Morales
Jonathan A. Hernandez
Bel Hernandez
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
The story of three generations of the Sanchez family. From their adventurous journey from Mexico to California in the 1920's through the turbulent 1950's, to the stark realities of modern day, their struggle to live the American dream is sometimes darkened but never diminished.
Director
Gregory Nava
Cast
Jimmy Smits
Edward James Olmos
Esai Morales
Jonathan A. Hernandez
Bel Hernandez
Abel Woolrich
Enrique Castillo
Elpidia Carrillo
Jacob Vargas
Constance Marie
Lupe Ontiveros
Bruce Gray
Romeo Rene Fabian
Valente Rodriguez
Ernie W. Lively
Emilio Del Haro
Bibi Besch
Ruben Sierra
Samuel Hernandez
Mary Steenburgen
Seidy Lopez
Amelia Zapata
Salvador Hernandez
Pete Leal
Alicia Del Lago
Brian Lally
Valerie Wildman
Moses Saldana
Cris Franco
Saachiko
Eric Mondragon
Jose Mario Rodriguez
Bill Mondragon
Eddie Ayala
Thomas Rosales Jr.
Anthony Gonzales
Juan Jimenez
Benito Martinez
Eduardo Lopez Rojas
Michael Tomlinson
Angelina Estrada
Delana Michaels
George Lopez
Jenny Gago
David Salas
Peter Mark Vasquez
Michael Delorenzo
Emilio Rivera
Rosalee Mayeux
Laura Settlemier Mcintyre
Dedee Pfeiffer
Susan Campos
Arturo Palacios
Dennis Jimenez
Rafael Cortes
Greg Albert
Jeanette Jurado
Michael Gonzalez
Cassandra Campos
Bart Johnson
Jesus Alberto Guzman
Paul Robert Langdon
Ivette Reina
Leon Singer
Jennifer Lopez
Willie C Carpenter
Maria Canals Barrera
Alex Tanasi
Scott Bakula
Crew
Richard Alatorre
Laura Albert
Marc Alexandre
Aram Allan
Marie Eugenia Alma
Adalberto Alvarez
Rick Andres
Jose Araujo
Kim Aubry
Pepe Avila
William R Bain
Chris J. Ball
Carrol Ballard
Rick Barker
Steve Barnett
Saudhi Batalia
Carrie Bauer
Jeff Behlendorf
Guy Belegaud
Kevin Benson
Fahey Benton
Ute Berthold
Sister Karen Boccalero
Rob Bonz
Martin Bosworth
Greg Boyle
Dan Bradley
Ben Bray
Craig Bray
Robert A Bress
Vickie Brinkkord
Mark Brown
Thom Calderon
Candice Campos
John Cann
Tina Canny
Christine Cantella
Lou Carlucci
Joel Castro
Hector Chavez
Pablo Chavez
Craig Cisco
Francis Ford Coppola
Francis Ford Coppola
Chickie Corral
Joe Corral
David Corrick
Tangi Crawford
Jaime Cruz
Mary Pina Cruz
Jeanine Davis
José De Jesús MacÃas
Nancy De Los Santos
John Deblau
John Deblau
Glen Deitell
Miguel Delgado
Humberto Deluna
Lisa Campbell Demaine
Beth Depatie
Ken Deubel
Terry Deubel
Ken Diaz
Anthony N Dicovitsky
Rudy Dillon
Thomas Dominguez
Corina Duran
Guy East
Tony Eckert
Kathy Edwards
John A Escobar
Robert Fernandez
Anthony Figueroa
Linda Folk
Nick Frangakis
David Frederick
David Frederick
David Frederick
Clare Freeman
Karen Frischmann
Jim Fulmis
Maria Elena Gaitan
Octavio Gaitan-diaz
Mark Gantt
David M. Garber
Angelina Garcia
Luis Garcia
Kirk Gardener
Dennis Hugh Goble
A P Gonzales
Pat Gonzalez
Laura Greenlee
Linda Griego
Bernard Grisez
Wesley Groves
Randy Guiting
Jill Gurr
John Hamilton
Julie Hansen
Robert F Hartman
Anton A Herbert
Irene Hernandez
Jan M Heyneker
Randi Hiller
Janet Hirshenson
Evelyn Hokanson
Cory Huber
Diane Huffman
Fred Huffman
Heather Hughes
Julie Huntsinger
Andreas Hutter
Kevin Hyman
David Inman
Judy Irola
Kevin Jackson
Roman Jakobi
Jane Jenkins
Barbara Jitner Martinez
Rolf Johnson
Thomas Johnson
Tom Johnson
Jim Kallett
Lisa Keller
Sabine Kelling
Francis Kenny
Melissa Kent
Jim Ketcham
Bill Kinder
Mark Knightley
Teusa Koiwai
Rick Kopenheffer
Kris Kringle
Rick Kusnier
Edward Lachman
Jeffrey M Landis
Ralph Lardizabal
Darryl Legendre
Samuel Lehmer
Robert J Lemos
Douglas C Lewis
Matthew Libatique
Stephen Lighthill
Peter Loncto
Pearl A Lucero
David Luckenbach
Tom Luddy
Adam Lustig
Brent Mannon
Diane Marin
Bill Martinez
Denise Martinez
Jacklin Masteran
Patricia Mata
Pedro Mata
George Maxwell
Michella Mayorga
Mike Mcduffee
Mark Mckenzie
Gabriel Medina
Leticia Mercado
Maria Elena Mercado
Rona Michele
Antonio Molina
Gloria Molina
Sergio Molina
Luis Monreal
Sandra Montiel
Marnie Moore
Ellen Moranski
Isis Mussenden
Roger Mussenden
Troy Myers
Dominic Napolitano
Cheryl Nardi
Gregory Nava
Gregg Nestor
Alex Nogales
Hugo Noriega
Consuelo F Norte
Lorenzo O'brien
Kathleen Ann O'loughlin
Jaime Ortiz
Valerie Ozeta
Eliza Parkerson
Eddie Perez
Martha Claire Pilcher
Adam Pinkstaff
Osman Posada
Osman Posada
Paul Prokop
Cesar Quiroza
Nick Radell
Thomas Real
Marie Regan
Michael Joseph Reyes
Nancy Richardson
Barbara Riley
Raquella Rios
Barry Robison
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Makeup
Articles
My Family/Mi Familia
My Family was written by husband and wife team Gregory Nava and Anna Thomas, who received an Oscar® nomination for their highly acclaimed 1983 screenplay collaboration El Norte. Nava, who also directed both films, had always wanted to make a movie that centered on the family. "What I want to tell in the film," said Nava in a 1995 interview, "is the story of a family. I don't think you understand Latino culture unless you understand the family." While Nava drew on his own Mexican heritage and family for the script, he was also influenced by stories of other immigrant families. "The inspiration for the film is obviously based on my family," said Nava, "but I would say that the influence is more inspirational rather than specific. A lot of specifics came from other families when I was doing research for the film in East Los Angeles."
With its many vivid characters, director Gregory Nava had a chance to cast some of the best Latino actors in My Family including Jimmy Smits, Esai Morales, Constance Marie and Eduardo Lopez Rojas, one of Mexico's most respected actors. Jennifer Lopez, in her first major role in a feature film, also makes a memorable impression as the young matriarch of the family, Maria, who must fight her way back to her family after being illegally deported to Mexico.
Jimmy Smits, who plays troubled son Jimmy, loved making My Family. "From the beginning, My Family was a movie I knew I had to make," said Smits in 1995. "My Family is one of the very few films with an entirely Latino cast and Latino director, and all of us working on it felt it would be a real breakthrough." His attraction to the story had to do with its epic quality. "I like the span of the piece in terms of going from the early times of when California was part of Mexico and really seeing the family go through the 50s and the 80s," he said. "This is a multi-generational piece. In that respect the piece to me is like a jewel."
Co-star Edward James Olmos was also pleased to be a part of My Family. "Each culture has its own definitive understanding of...where they come from, where they evolved from, what their mythology is," said Olmos in 1995. "The core feeling of what this story brings to us as Americans is a look at the backbone of what it is to be a Mexican in America."
One of the challenges some of the actors had to endure due to the scope of the film included extensive aging makeup, which could take many hours. Actress Jenny Gago, who plays the older Maria, had to age 30 years throughout the course of the film. "I had no idea what I was getting myself into," she said. "I knew it would be a challenge. I didn't know that seven and a half hours later I would be ready for camera." Makeup artists Ken Diaz and Mark Sanchez received an Academy Award nomination for their remarkable work in My Family.
Gregory Nava also wanted to visually capture the changing look of the Sanchez family home over the course of multiple decades. Nava was inspired by the vibrant paintings of Chicana artist Patssi Valdez and wanted the interiors of the Sanchez house to reflect a similar warmth and energy that he saw in Valdez's work. Valdez understood what an authentic Mexican-American home should look like and was brought on board to do some of the set design on My Family herself. "My research was just to look inside myself," she said in 1995. "I was born and raised in East L.A. and my paintings tend to be very brilliant and colorful, and Greg thought that really reflected the Chicano spirit. And that's what we captured in the interior of the house I hope."
My Family was released in May 1995 to wide acclaim. The Los Angeles Times said, "Your head may insist you resist the unashamed sentimentality of My Family, but your heart will encourage you to give in, and for once your heart will be right." Roger Ebert in his review for the Chicago Sun-Times said, "Their story is told in images of startling beauty and great overflowing energy; it is rare to hear so much laughter from an audience that is also sometimes moved to tears. Few movies like this get made because few filmmakers have the ambition to open their arms wide and embrace so much life. This is the great American story, told again and again, of how our families came to this land and tried to make it better for their children...Through all the beauty, laughter and tears, the strong heart of the family beats...Rarely have I felt at the movies such a sense of time and history, of stories and lessons passing down the generations, of a family living in its memories."
Reviews particularly singled out Jimmy Smits for his powerful, nuanced performance as the angry and withdrawn Sanchez son, Jimmy. "With a deft touch that lightens the story, and the charismatic presence this film has needed all along, Mr. Smits almost singlehandedly makes My Family more engaging," said the New York Times. The Los Angeles Times said, "...Smits as the smoldering, exasperated loner Jimmy finally gives the kind of movie star performance that has been expected of him for years, personally invigorating the entire second half of the film."
My Family may focus on a Mexican-American family, but its themes are universal. "It's always been my dream to do a big family saga, so I think that My Family will appeal very strongly to Latinos because they all love and relate to their families in a very profound way," said Nava in 1995. "But it's also the greatest crossover point, because everybody comes from a family." My Family is a film that bridges the gap between cultures and can appeal to anyone. "I'm constantly asked, 'Will this change the way Latino films are perceived?'" said Jimmy Smits in a 1995 article he wrote for Entertainment Weekly. "I know this film alone is not going to do it, but I hope that industry people will now see there is a large market for movies that both are true to the Latino experience and use Latino actors. That way maybe an accomplished director like Greg Nava won't have to wait six years before he gets his next picture made. After all, My Family is just the tip of the iceberg of Latino stories that we have to tell."
Gregory Nava sums up this theme of crossing over in the film's use of bridges as a metaphor. "...the film is very much about bridges," he said in 1995, "the bridges that bridge Los Angeles with East Los Angeles. The people from East Los Angeles cross the bridge, but the people on the western side don't cross into East Los Angeles. And the bridges need to be crossed in both directions. But the image of the bridge extends beyond that. It is the bridges that exist between us and our past, as Latinos, our roots, and the bridges that then, understanding that, lead us to our future. The bridges that we have to build between people and members of the family, between fathers and sons, and mothers and daughters, and brothers and sisters."
Producer: Anna Thomas
Director: Gregory Nava
Screenplay: Gregory Nava, Anna Thomas
Cinematography: Edward Lachman
Art Direction: Tony Myers; Adam Lustig (co-art director)
Music: Mark McKenzie
Film Editing: Nancy Richardson
Cast: Edward James Olmos (Paco), Rafael Cortes (Roberto), Ivette Reina (Trini), Amelia Zapata (Roberto's girlfriend), Jacob Vargas (Young Jose), Emilio Del Haro (oxcart driver), Abel Woolrich (oxcart driver), Leon Singer (El Californio), Rosalee Mayeux (Maria's employer), Jennifer Lopez (young Maria), Alicia del Lago (Maria's aunt), Thomas Rosales (The Boatman), Esai Morales (Chucho), Constance Marie (Toni).
C-125m. Letterboxed.
by Andrea Passafiume
My Family/Mi Familia
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Winner of a nonofficial award from the Catholic Organization for Cinema (OCIC) at the 1995 San Sebastian Film Festival.
Winner of the Grand Jury Prize for Best Feature at the 1995 WorldFest/Houston International Film Festival.
Released in United States 1995
Released in United States April 1995
Released in United States April 27, 1995
Released in United States January 1995
Released in United States on Video November 7, 1995
Released in United States September 1995
Released in United States Spring May 3, 1995
Shown at San Francisco International Film Festival April 20 - May 4, 1995.
Shown at San Sebastian Film Festival (in competition) September 14-23, 1995.
Shown at Seattle International Film Festival May 18 - June 11, 1995.
Shown at WorldFest/Houston International Film Festival (in competition) April 21-30, 1995.
Began shooting May 9, 1994.
Completed shooting June 30, 1994.
Released in United States 1995 (Shown at San Francisco International Film Festival April 20 - May 4, 1995.)
Released in United States 1995 (Shown at Seattle International Film Festival May 18 - June 11, 1995.)
Released in United States April 1995 (Shown at WorldFest/Houston International Film Festival (in competition) April 21-30, 1995.)
Released in United States April 27, 1995 (Benefit premiere at the Cinemrama Dome in Los Angeles for the National Latino Communications Center April 27, 1995.)
Released in United States January 1995 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival (Premieres) in Park City, Utah January 19-29, 1995.)
Released in United States Spring May 3, 1995
Released in United States September 1995 (Shown at San Sebastian Film Festival (in competition) September 14-23, 1995.)
Released in United States on Video November 7, 1995