Blood of the Condor explained

Blood of the Condor
Yawar Mallku
Director:Jorge Sanjinés
Producer:Ricardo Rada
Starring:Marcelino Yanahuaya
Music:Alfredo Domínguez
Ignacio Quispe
Alberto Villalpando
Cinematography:Antonio Eguino
Editing:Jorge Sanjinés
Studio:Ukamau Group
Distributor:Tricontinental Film Center (1973, US)
Runtime:70 minutes
Country:Bolivia
Language:Quechua
Spanish
English

Blood of the Condor (Quechua: Yawar Mallku, Spanish; Castilian: Sangre de cóndor) is a 1969 Bolivian docudrama film co-written and directed by Jorge Sanjinés and starring Marcelino Yanahuaya. The film tells the story of an indigenous Bolivian community receiving medical care from the Peace Corps-like United States-backed agency Cuerpo del Progreso ("Progress Corps") which is secretly sterilising local women.

The story, which was based on accounts by the indigenous people to the filmmaker, provoked an outrage in the public which led to a government investigation about the Peace Corps' actions in Bolivia, which ended in the expulsion of the agency from the country.

Plot

An indigenous Bolivian community receiving medical care from the Peace Corps-like American agency Cuerpo del Progreso ("Progress Corps") which is secretly sterilising local women. The Bolivians attack the foreigners, and the attackers are rounded up and shot by the authorities. The brother of the shot protagonist desperately seeks medical care for his brother, but due to lack of money for proper care his brother dies.[1]

Impact

Sanjinés' Yawar Mallku is thought to have led to the expulsion of the Peace Corps from Bolivia in an act of anti-imperialist cultural nationalism by the indigenous people.[2]

After showings of Yawar Mallku, Sanjinés learned that many peasants had criticism about the difficulty of his films due to the use of flashback for narration, as his film-making was greatly influenced by European art cinema, and about the lack of attention to denouncing the causes of the indigenous peoples' issues. He took this into account when making his next film, called ("The Courage of the People"), in 1971.[3]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Stephen M. Hart. A Companion to Latin American Film. 11 August 2012. 2004. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. 978-1-85566-106-6. 69–.
  2. Geidel, Molly. "Sowing Death in Our Women's Wombs": Modernization and Indigenous Nationalism in the 1960s Peace Corps and Jorge Sanjinés' Yawar Mallku. American Quarterly - Volume 62, Number 3, September 2010, pp. 763-786
  3. Rosalind Galt, Karl Schoonover. Global Art Cinema: New Theories and Histories. 2010, pp. 359.