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Glendora Movie Trailer HD - Plot synopsis: In the heart of the Mississippi Delta, the village of Glendora may seem quiet and remote. But beneath its stillness lies a vibrant, tightly knit African-American community whose strength, resilience, and creativity thrive despite chronic scarcity. GLENDORA is the result of five years of close collaboration between filmmaker and townspeople—an intimate portrait of life where economic fragility meets profound cultural wealth.

Told through the voices of multiple generations, the film weaves personal testimonies with daily rituals—birthdays, graduations, weddings, funerals— capturing the rhythm of a town that continuously rises above its circumstances. As the Mississippi landscape shifts, so do the stories, revealing both the universality of human experience and the distinct textures of rural Southern life.

More than a place, GLENDORA reflects a larger American history shaped by racial injustice, economic neglect, and structural inequality. The film underscores the community’s efforts to stay connected and shape its future amid ongoing challenges.

GLENDORA is a film made with—and by—the people who live there. It amplifies voices too often unheard, offering a powerful story of culture, resilience, creativity, and collective memory from a town long overlooked—but not easily forgotten.

ISABELLE ARMAND (Filmmaker, Cinematographer, Writer)

Isabelle Armand is a New York–based documentary photographer and filmmaker whose work interweaves photography, film, and oral testimonies to explore the complex layers of people whose histories, lives, and potential have long been undervalued. Her acclaimed book Levon and Kennedy: Mississippi Innocence Project (powerHouse Books, 2018), which documents the wrongful convictions of two men, has received wide recognition. Her images are held in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum, Akron Art Museum, and Portland Museum of Art. Armand’s work has been featured in The New York Times, Art in America, The Economist, The Daily Beast, and others. She recently completed her first feature documentary, Glendora, and is currently editing a photo book by the same title.

USA, Feature Film, 74 Minutes, Not Rated, 2025
Transcript
00:00We're going to start out by Glendale, right?
00:04It's a small community. It's very small.
00:08I actually love where I'm at. I mean, certain people
00:12don't want to come here because they feel like they're going to get harm or hurt,
00:16and it shouldn't be like this.
00:24I was a child.
00:28We had a four-room house. Sometimes it'd be three or four
00:32slept in the bed together. If you had a tick with some cotton
00:36in it, you was a big shot.
00:40It was quite an interesting thing growing up down here, you know.
00:44But then, one day, some things went south.
00:48And we're in trouble again.
00:52Easy. Yeah, it comes from what I go through.
00:56Just pain really just wouldn't be on my mind with the time.
01:00The beginning of modern civil rights
01:02started here in Glendale.
01:04This white man had my grandmothers.
01:06People would act so,
01:08why the mirror is so much lighter than Annie?
01:12The one was born on the light of the moon,
01:14and the other is born on the dog.
01:16You know, you can read between the land or no.
01:30of God called me.
01:34But you know, it was an easy thing.
01:36Here we go.
01:38There's a great relationship.
01:40Here's what happened.
01:42We're going to see that new life on the family.
01:44It's so far.
01:46There's an outside.
01:48There's a great relationship.
01:50There's a great relationship.
01:52You know, we're going to see this.
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