Screened as part of NZIFF 2023

Earth Mama 2023

Directed by Savanah Leaf

A pregnant single mother with two children in foster care fights an impossible system in this affecting debut feature from Savanah Leaf.

USA In English
97 minutes Colour / DCP

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Cody Ryder
,
Shirley O'Connor
,
Medb Riordan
,
Sam Bisbee
,
Savanah Leaf

Cinematography

Jody Lee Lipes

Editor

George Cragg

Production Designer

Juliana Barreto Barreto

Costume Designer

Natasha Hester

Music

Kelsey Lu

Cast

Tia Nomore
,
Erika Alexander
,
Doechii
,
Keta Price
,
Sharon Duncan-Brewster
,
Dominic Fike
,
Bokeem Woodbine

Festivals

Sundance
,
New Directors/New Films
,
San Francisco 2023

Elsewhere

“A devastating and evocative portrait of motherhood refracted through the prisms of race and class, Savanah Leaf’s auspicious debut feature (expanding upon her documentary short, The Heart Still Hums [2020]) is a deeply affecting work of cinematic humanism. Set in the Bay Area, the film follows Gia (portrayed with immense complexity by Oakland rapper Tia Nomore) as she contends with pregnancy and poverty while longing for her children (who have been placed in foster care) and dodging Child Protective Services in the fear that they’ll take her soon-to-be-born baby from her as well.

Facing an impossible situation, Gia warms to the idea of giving her baby up for adoption, and connects with a well-meaning, middle-class couple (Sharon Duncan-Brewster and Bokeem Woodbine), who could potentially give the child a better life. But a constellation of factors—especially Gia’s own sense of guilt—lays bare the fact that, for Gia, there is simply no way to win. Lensed in richly textured 16mm by Jody Lee Lipes, Earth Mama is both a heartrending film about a young woman grappling with the most fundamental questions of motherhood amid utterly hostile socioeconomic conditions, and a formally sophisticated work that suggests and conjures rather than facilely connecting the dots for us.” — New Directors/New Films

“Any film tackling the petty and punishing bureaucracies of the foster care system risks wading into melodrama or cliché, but Earth Mama largely avoids those rookie traps, and with an unpredictable and fiercely focused actress at its roots.” — Ryan Lattanzio, Indiewire