Short Thriller Bodies Gives LALIFF a Hard-Edged Police Drama

Bueno’s 16-minute film about two Latino officers confronting a hidden crisis joins more than 90 works at this year’s Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival.

Luca Bueno

Writer-director Luca Bueno’s short thriller Bodies will premiere this week in LALIFF’s Terra Incognita shorts program, adding police-procedural tension to the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival’s 90-plus-title slate at TCL Chinese Theatres from 28 May to 1 June.

The 16-minute film tracks two LAPD officers answering a disturbance call in an immigrant neighborhood where Officer Alvarez notices cultural clues that point to a far deeper crisis inside the modest home. Bueno says the premise arose from stories he heard while growing up in Pico-Union, a district shaped by Central-American migration, and wanted “to show the humanity behind headlines that often reduce us to statistics.”

Speaking to Deadline, the 26-year-old filmmaker stressed that casting Latino actors in every principal role was non-negotiable: “If the officers and the family didn’t speak Spanish at home, the film would ring false.” He also revealed that festival programmers placed Bodies in a horror-adjacent block to underscore how social fears and genre tropes can overlap.

LALIFF, founded in 1997 by Edward James Olmos and now an Oscar-qualifying event, spotlights work by U.S. and international Latino talent; roughly half this year’s roster hails from Latino filmmakers based in the United States, according to organizers. The festival’s status means winners in its U.S. Latino live-action short category will be eligible for Academy consideration, a pathway Bueno calls “a lifeline for new voices who can’t self-finance awards campaigns.”

Bodies marks Bueno’s third collaboration with producer Rafael Maiolino after award-winning student shorts Luna (2022) and Skyward (2025). He is currently negotiating broadcast rights with a Latinx-focused streaming platform and has expanded the story into a feature outline set against the 2024 LAPD traffic-stop data controversy. For now, festival audiences will decide whether this contained tale of suspicion and compassion earns the momentum to move beyond the short-film circuit.

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