Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Baston directs ‘boxing adjacent’ doc on Chavez, De La Hoya fight

- By Lindsey Bahr

Boxing legend Oscar De La Hoya wanted to make a documentar­y about his 1996 fight against Julio Cesar Chavez. It was coming up on 25 years since the “Ultimate Glory” showdown, and he figured the time was right to look back. So he asked Eva Longoria Baston, his friend of 20 years, if she’d be interested in directing.

“I was like, ‘Oh, God, no. No, no, no,’ ” Baston laughed. “The last thing I wanted to do was a boxing doc with stats and jabs.”

She remembered the night of the bout, of course.

“You didn’t even have to be a boxing fan to know where you were the day that that fight happened,” Baston said. “My entire neighborho­od was like looking for stolen cable to watch it, or like one person’s TV to pay for the fight. You know, ‘Everybody come over, and we all pitch in a dollar!’ ”

But then she started to think about that moment and how divisive it was to Mexican-Americans. Chavez was a Mexican national. De La Hoya was from East Los Angeles. And she realized that was the movie she wanted to make. The end result is “La Guerra Civil,” a DAZN Originals production that recently premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.

“I said, what’s interestin­g to me is to really go back and explore that divide because we are still encounteri­ng it today. You know, the question of ‘Am I Mexican enough?’ And the question of who can claim that they are quote-unquote Mexican and how you straddle the hyphen of being Mexican-American,” she said. “I live that experience. I straddle that hyphen every day of my life. And to do it on a

public stage that big, that publicly? For Oscar, it was heartbreak­ing.”

It is, what she lovingly calls, “boxing adjacent,” including interviews with Chavez, De La Hoya and his Mexican trainer at the time, Jesus Rivero, but also with academics and onlookers who examine the cultural divide then and now.

And though many of the cards were in place for Baston and her team to get the access and interviews they needed, she also shot the documentar­y during the pandemic, which led to more than a few headaches and obstacles.

De La Hoya, she knew, wasn’t going to be a problem. “I knew most of the stories he was telling. And I think it helped the documentar­y to have that intimate connection,” she said. “I think he had a comfort level with me that allowed him to explore the emotions raw. You could feel his pain and him rememberin­g the pain of being booed by his own people. I think our friendship allowed that vulnerabil­ity to come through.”

But she hadn’t met Chavez yet and was a little nervous that she’d be able to establish a bond to get what she needed.

“You want an intimate conversati­on, and it’s hard to do that when you have a plexiglass, a mask, a shield and you’re 8 feet away,” she said.

It turns out she needn’t have worried. “He’s so charismati­c, so charming. And he’s a truth-teller. He’s a very reliable narrator,” she said. “It’s a beautiful, refreshing thing to have somebody in a documentar­y not revise history. He really remembered the struggles. He remembered the challenges. He remembered the good times, too, but not without the bad.”

Now she’s hopeful that the film will reach a large audience — including those who may not think that a sports or boxing documentar­y is for them.

“We are still dealing with these similar issues, especially with immigratio­n being such a hot topic and the economy being hit so hard by COVID and our community, the Mexican community, being disproport­ionately affected by COVID, I think all of it is still fertile ground for conversati­on,” she said. “Let’s find our commonalit­ies more so than our difference­s because we have a lot bigger issues to face and need to face them together.”

 ?? ILSE FERNANDEZ/SUNDANCE INSTITUTE ?? Eva Longoria Baston and Oscar De La Hoya during “La Guerra Civil’s” production.
ILSE FERNANDEZ/SUNDANCE INSTITUTE Eva Longoria Baston and Oscar De La Hoya during “La Guerra Civil’s” production.

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