Cover Filipino-American filmmaker Kayla Abuda Galang wrote and directed “When You Left Me on That Boulevard”, which won the Short Film Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival (Photo: Kayla Abuda Galang)

The Filipino-American creative and 2023 Gen.T honouree discusses how she wants to break the limits on stories that filmmakers of colour get to tell

A comedy film set in San Diego: this is what won Kayla Abuda Galang the Short Film Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. It’s funny, it’s loud—and it’s very Filipino.

When You Left Me on That Boulevard is Galang’s attempt at recapturing adolescence in Paradise Hills. Set in 2006, the short film revolves around Ly and her cousins as they “get high” before Thanksgiving dinner.

Here, we ask the 2023 Gen.T honouree about her creative process as a filmmaker and why she believes artists of colour in the United States need more freedom to tell fun stories. 

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What do you hope to achieve each time you create or write a new short film or story? What kind of stories do you like to tell?

Kayla Abuda Galang (KAG): I’d say the stories I like to tell are microcosmic love stories. I love exploring familiar, universally felt experiences of love, heartache, joy and stupidity. I think, at all angles, I’m really obsessed with finding the truth: in character behaviours, motivations and wants, and in the worlds that I’m building. I really try to achieve this because I think within truth, there is specificity, immersion and empathy. I respond to films that build honest bridges with people.

Above Teaser of Galang's Sundance Short Film Grand Prize Jury winning film, “When You Left Me on That Boulevard”

Why do you think you won the Grand Jury Prize?

KAG: I don’t really know. I think it was just a beautiful coincidence of the film, the jury and what they were ready to receive and feel in watching all of this year’s films. There were so many great films at the festival this year, so I was pretty gobsmacked by the decision.

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What was the process like in ideating, creating, and filming When You Left Me on That Boulevard?

KAG: The process of creating When You Left Me on That Boulevard was very communal and generative. It started out with me kicking ideas around in December 2020 and meditating on the first feature I had written a couple of years prior. I initially knew I wanted to capture adolescence and girlhood specifically in Paradise Hills in the mid-2000s, which is where and when I grew up. I played with a few scenes from the feature, but I always came back to these brief Thanksgiving vignettes that I had written. I gravitated towards these vibrant textures of food, family and karaoke, and the experience of waiting for the day to end as a teenager. 

We were really intentional and careful about how we built our team and our community. We adapted community agreements and values from organisations and groups we were a part of. We upheld transparency, open communication and generativity as our collective values and identified ways to move through conflict.

What mattered to me was making a film incredibly specific and reflective of the community that I was portraying. So it couldn’t just be anyone on camera and it couldn’t just be anyone behind the camera. We were persistent in hiring locally and finding people who understood the cultural and geographical specificity of what we were making.

As a filmmaker of colour in the United States, there is this invisible but incredibly felt pressure to position your project as an agent of change.

- Kayla Abuda Galang -

Why did you centre When You Left Me on That Boulevard on a Filipino family? Why is upholding your Filipino heritage important to you?

KAG: The film is based on my family and my experience of family. Upholding my family’s heritage and history is particularly important to me because of the risk, loss and trauma that was involved in my family’s migration to the States. It’s important to honour my parents’ roots and how those colour their journey and my place here. So, really, it’s about honouring the resilience and joy of our being here altogether.

What obstacles did you have to overcome as an Asian-American filmmaker? 

KAG: A major obstacle I faced was trying to get institutional understanding so we could get the resources and funding to make the movie. And we didn’t get any of those things or substantial feedback on them through the grant cycles or fellowship applications.

As a filmmaker of colour in the United States, there is this invisible but incredibly felt pressure to position your project as an agent of change and social impact, as breaking some sort of mould or overcoming trauma. These stories are necessary, but they’re not the only stories that filmmakers of colour should tell. It’s also deeply unfair to put such an onus on filmmakers of colour to drive change for injustices they didn’t create.

I want the right to make stories of varying tones and focuses for myself and for my fellow filmmakers of colour. The stories I want to tell are very simple—often funny, stupid and awkward. And I can’t necessarily position something like When You Left Me on That Boulevard as a traditional agent of social change or impact. So that’s what I'm still coming up against as a filmmaker.

I don’t know that I've necessarily broken past that obstacle so much as I've very loudly complained about it in the spaces I’ve been in. So I just hope to build more discourse around that. And I hope to expand the breadth of stories that Asian-American and filmmakers of colour get to tell.

What projects are you looking forward to creating in the coming months/year?

KAG: I’m excited to continue developing the features that I have coming up. One is born from When You Left Me on That Boulevard. It’s called ‘06-’07, and it observes the same characters over the course of the school year. I like to call that my suburban high-stakes love story. I’m excited about expanding the amount of time and space that we get to see these characters in.

Another one that I have coming up is a more shoestring-budget indie film based in modern-day Houston that watches a family move through the death of their patriarch, the funeral planning, the logistics and the noise of visiting extended family. That one’s called On Earth as it is in Heaven.

Both of these stories have big family and cultural elements. I also love the geographical specificity. These are my hometown stories because I grew up between San Diego and Houston. And it’s my chance to honour these really, really wonderful, vastly different cities and their local cultures on a visceral and immersive level.


See more honourees from the Philippines on the Gen.T List 2023.

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