LA Made & El Cine Presents: Bread and Roses, and the Right to Be Seen

bread and roses film poster

Date(s):

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Time:

2 p.m.

Location:

Mark Taper Auditorium

Type:

In Person

Audience:

Category:

Series:

Language:

English

RSVP:

Reservations are not required but are highly encouraged. To reserve your seat, please visit this link to find the event. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis.

Description:

LA Made in collaboration with El Cine presents a screening of Bread and Roses (2000), directed by Ken Loach, a powerful portrait of labor, dignity, and collective resistance. Set in Los Angeles, the film follows immigrant janitorial workers organizing for fair wages and basic rights, foregrounding the intersection of work, migration, and identity within the city’s social fabric.

This screening invites the viewer to reflect on how cinema can give visibility to lived struggles while remaining intimate and human. Loach’s approach, rooted in realism and collaboration, raises questions about authorship, representation, and the ethics of telling working-class and immigrant stories on screen.

Following the screening, filmmakers Gabriela Ortega, Alexis Garcia, and Walter Thompson will join a conversation on identity and filmmaking, considering how labor, community, and political urgency continue to inform contemporary cinematic practice.


El Cine: Film schools are expensive, creating a gap that excludes underfunded communities. At El Cine, we believe film education begins at the cinema and through conversations. El Cine aims not only to bridge the gap between media and community but also to educate filmmakers and companies to become better allies. Cinema is the mirror that can change the world. El Cine is a space for anyone who is seeking to learn more about different cultures, about the human experience, and about themselves.

Alexis Garcia: Los Angeles-based filmmaker Alexis C. Garcia is of Afro-Puerto Rican descent. She was born in the Bronx, NY, and spent her formative years between Miami, FL, and Puerto Rico. In 2022, she was selected to participate in the Latino Film Institute's Inclusion Fellowship sponsored by Netflix, where she wrote and directed the Oscar-qualified short, Daughter of the Sea.

Gabriela Ortega is an award-winning Dominican filmmaker and actor. She is a USC graduate, Sundance Labs alum, and one of Filmmaker Magazine’s 25 New Faces of Independent Film. Her latest film, Marga en el DF, is premiering at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival.

Walter Thompson-Hernández is a filmmaker and writer from southeast Los Angeles whose work blends documentary realism with poetic narrative. His Sundance-premiering short If I Go Will They Miss Me earned him recognition from Variety and Filmmaker Magazine. His debut feature Kites premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, continuing his focus on community-driven, hybrid storytelling.

This program is made possible by the LA Made Fund.

 

For ADA accommodations, call (213) 228-7430 at least 72 hours prior to the event.

Para ajustes razonables según la ley de ADA, llama al (213) 228-7430 al menos 72 horas antes del evento.

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