You no longer belong in any country, and everyone wants to erase you from its memories. You have no home, support or dreams; you only carry the guilt of failure. The streets of Tijuana are your home now, this home that feels like purgatory. What remains is to survive.
An intimate portrait of members of a community that lives on the streets of Zona Norte in Tijuana, Mexico—located just next to the border with the United States and one of the city's most violent neighbourhoods. Alex, Hugo, Alan and Anthony reflect on their past and the relationships with their estranged families while facing a daily struggle against substance use disorder, health issues, police brutality and discrimination. Some of them used to have families and jobs in the US until they got deported and now own nothing but guilt and failure, while others were raised in broken families and have ended up living on the streets. They converge in Zona Norte, as outcasts trying to survive the hostilities of a society submerged in cartel wars, the government’s apathy and a global sanitary crisis, striving to hold on to their dreams of another chance at life.
