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We Shall Not Be Moved
(No nos moverán)
- Pierre Saint Martin
- Mexico
No nos moverán
A film by Pierre Saint Martin Castellanos
100 minutes
Winner of four Ariel Awards—for Best First Feature, Original Screenplay, Actress, and Breakthrough Performance—and selected as Mexico’s official submission for the Best International Film Oscar, We Shall Not Be Moved tells the story of Socorro—played by Luisa Huertas in a tour-de-force performance—a retired lawyer consumed by her obsession to find the soldier who killed her brother during the student protests of October 2, 1968, when demands for democracy and justice were brutally silenced in Mexico City’s Tlatelolco Square. Nearly six decades later, her relentless pursuit has fractured her relationships with her sister, Esperanza, and her son, Jorge. When a new clue emerges, Socorro sets out on a perilous quest for vengeance, putting her family, her legacy, and her own life in jeopardy. Shot in striking black and white, director Pierre Saint Martin Castellanos delivers a powerful and intimate reflection on the enduring wounds of Mexico’s modern history.
Winner of four Ariel Awards—for Best First Feature, Original Screenplay, Actress, and Breakthrough Performance—and selected as Mexico’s official submission for the Best International Film Oscar, We Shall Not Be Moved tells the story of Socorro—played by Luisa Huertas in a tour-de-force performance—a retired lawyer consumed by her obsession to find the soldier who killed her brother during the student protests of October 2, 1968, when demands for democracy and justice were brutally silenced in Mexico City’s Tlatelolco Square. Nearly six decades later, her relentless pursuit has fractured her relationships with her sister, Esperanza, and her son, Jorge. When a new clue emerges, Socorro sets out on a perilous quest for vengeance, putting her family, her legacy, and her own life in jeopardy. Shot in striking black and white, director Pierre Saint Martin Castellanos delivers a powerful and intimate reflection on the enduring wounds of Mexico’s modern history.
Biographies
Writer/producer/director Travis Gutiérrez Senger
Travis Gutiérrez Senger is a Mexican American director, writer and producer. His recent project, ASCO: Without Permission, a genre-defying film about the Chicano, avant-garde art group ASCO, premiered at SXSW ’25 and was the Opening Night selection for the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival, co-presented with LACMA. The film is executive produced by Gael García Bernal and Diego Luna and has received support from the Ford Foundation, Film Independent, and the Dolby Creator Lab. His prior projects, Desert Cathedral, White Lines and The Fever, along with a number of shorts, have screened at top festivals such as Tribeca, SXSW, Chicago International Film Festival and Seattle International Film Festival. He founded ANM Films, a premium film and TV company, focused on bold, progressive Latinx stories.
ASCO member Patssi Valdez
Internationally acclaimed Patssi Valdez is best known for her vibrant paintings, installations and early performance work with the avant-garde art group ASCO, of which she is a founding member. Born and raised in East Los Angeles, Valdez received her BFA from Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles and was named outstanding alumni in the 1980s. In 2005, she was named the “Latina of Excellence in the Cultural Arts” by the U.S. Congressional Hispanic Caucus. Valdez’s art has been featured at the Alma Awards and the Latin Grammys. She is the recipient of many prestigious awards, including from the J. Paul Getty Trust Fund for the Visual Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, and the Brody Arts Fellowship in Visual Arts. Her art work is included in major collections, including the National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C.; The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; The Tucson Museum of Art, Arizona; The San Jose Museum of Art, California; and the El Paso Museum of Art, Texas.
Learn more about Patssi’s artwork in exhibition at the NMMA >
ASCO member Harry Gamboa Jr.
Harry Gamboa Jr. is a photographer, writer, painter, and performer whose work highlights contemporary Chicano culture in his native Los Angeles. He co-founded Asco (Spanish for “nausea”), the East L.A. conceptual-performance art group active from 1972-1987. Gamboa’s work has been widely exhibited nationally and internationally, including: Academy Museum of Motion Pictures (2023); AltaMed Art Collection, Rome, Italy (2022); J.P. Getty Museum (2021), Museum Ludwig, Cologne (2020); Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C (2019), amongst countless other museums. He is the recipient of the Rockefeller Humanities Fellowship at CSU Los Angeles (2004), the Durfee Artist Award (2001), and the Flintridge Foundation Visual Artist Award (2000), and has been awarded by the J. Paul Getty Trust Fund for the Visual Arts (1990), California Arts Council (1996), and National Endowment for the Arts (1987 and 1980). Gamboa is on the faculty of the Program in Photography and Media at CalArts.
Event Information
Sunday, November 16, 2025
2:00pm
National Museum of Mexican Art
1852 W 19th St,
Chicago, IL 60608
More venue information...
Tickets
All Community Cinema screenings are free and open to the public. Advance registration is suggested. Learn more about Community Screenings…
Accessibility
Cinema/Chicago is committed to fostering an inclusive and accessible environment at all our programs and events. All event venues are fully wheelchair accessible, with no-step entrances or ramp access and elevators. All venues offer wheelchair-designated spaces, companion seating, easy-access theater seating, and accessible restrooms. For accommodation requests, please email us at access@chicagofilmfestival.com, call us at 312-683-0121, x108, or complete our Accommodation Request Form.











212 W Van Buren St., Suite 400