Bing Liu lives in Rockford, Illinois, as do two friends he met through skateboarding: Keire Johnson and Zack Mulligan. As they reach adulthood, Zack becomes a father and gets a job as a roofer to support his family, while Keire finds work as a dishwasher.
Over the course of the film, all three friends reveal that they grew up in abusive homes. Zack and his partner Nina begin to have difficulties in their relationship, and Bing learns that Zack may have been abusive towards Nina. A venture to create an indoor skatepark falls apart and, Zack is left with fewer options. Nina repeatedly leaves him.
Keire is promoted to a waiter and focuses on trying to educate himself. He grows apart from Zack and finds himself chafing against the racism of the town, which even comes from his friends. Though his father was abusive, he finds himself reflecting on positive memories of their relationship and the ways in which his father influenced him.
Interspersed with Zack and Keire's stories is footage from an interview Bing Liu conducted with his mother, during which he asks her if she knew his stepdad (her second husband) had abused him when she was not around. She mentions that he was also abusive to her, but she stayed with him because he was sweet when he was not being abusive. Eventually, she breaks down crying, telling Bing she wants to help him recover and urging him not to dwell on the past.
Zack and Nina finally separate for good, and they have a contentious relationship, with Nina filing for child support after Zack abruptly leaves the state. He eventually returns and slides further into alcoholism, struggling with how his decisions might affect his young son. In a final interview with Bing, Zack tacitly admits to hitting Nina when they were together.
Keire finally earns enough money to move to Denver. A post-script reveals that Nina is pursuing a degree, Zack has been promoted at work, and Keire has been successful in Denver pursuing both his educational goals and a career as a professional skateboarder.
Minding the Gap premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, where it received the U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Breakthrough Filmmaking.[3] In June 2018, Hulu acquired its distribution rights, and the film was released theatrically and on Hulu on August 17, 2018.[3][5] It aired on PBS on February 18, 2019, as part of the network's POV series.[6]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 100% of 128 critics' reviews of the film are positive, with an average rating of 8.7/10; the site's "critics consensus" reads: "Minding the Gap draws on more than a decade of documentary footage to assemble a poignant picture of young American lives that resonates far beyond its onscreen subjects."[8]OnMetacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 89 out of 100, indicating "universal acclaim".[9]
A. O. Scott of the New York Times called the film an "astonishing debut feature", and "a rich, devastating essay on race, class and manhood in 21st-century America."[10] Sophie Gilbert of The Atlantic called it "an extraordinary feat of filmmaking."[11]Richard BrodyofThe New Yorker wrote that the images of skateboarding "are merely the background and context for the film," whose "substance—domestic trauma, systemic racism, and economic dislocation—is also the very stuff of society, and the near-at-hand intimacy gives rise to a film of vast scope and political depth."[12]