Direction: Fernando Frias
Country: Mexico / USA
Fernando Frias’ I’m No Longer Here chronicles a typical immigrant song centered on an atypical character. 17-year-old Ulises Sampiero (Daniel Garcia Treviño) has a passion for cumbia dance and leads a non-violent gang called Los Terkos in the slums of Monterrey, Mexico. Wearing large clothes and boasting a peculiar hair style that brings me back some Japanese Manga characters, Ulises takes care of a bunch of young people in the tough streets of his neighborhood. However, an altercation with a member of another gang takes him to Queens, New York.
The American dream simply didn’t work for him. Undocumented, homeless and with no steady job, Ulises can only rely on his friends Lin (Angelina Chen), a 16-year-old who seems excited to meet him, and Gladys (Adríana Arbelaez), a Colombian prostitute who likes the same music as him.
Presented in a non-chronological way, the film is culturally interesting, but becomes a frustrating viewing as it advances. The developments are slow, deliberate and mournful, and even throwing the music factor in the mix, the tone remains austere, the expressiveness limited and the articulation of the scenes too calculated.
I felt some closeness with the fact that Ulises got caught in a mess that makes him unfit for New York and his hometown alike, but at the same time I struggled with the torpid aimlessness that marks the story. Not lost, but bored in translation and discontent with the excessive dance scenes. Nevertheless, I still think there’s something to be found here.