Club Frontera, also known as Xolos: Tijuana's Team, is a 2016 documentary film by Chris Cashman in his documentary directorial debut.
Tijuana's Xolos leave a positive impact on a city known mostly for its negative influence on society.
Principal photography lasted three years in Tijuana and the film is Chris Cashman's documentary directorial debut. Cashman said his focus was to explore the positivity in the culture of Tijuana and that he did not set out to make a sports documentary. He said he was inspired after attending a match at Caliente Stadium.
The film premiered at the San Diego Latino Film Festival where Cashman and Alejandro Guido were panelists at a press conference. The film was initially 100 minutes, but after release, it was retitled to Xolos: TijuanaâÂÂs Team and cut down to 44 minutes.
Sports Illustrated said the film delivers "admirable detail" on how "Tijuana, once known primarily for negative reasons, has an undeniably positive story to tell." Pink Egg Media said it was a "wonderful film" and enjoyed "how it blended footage from the 50âÂÂs and 60âÂÂs which captured how Tijuana used to look, against images of today."