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UTAMA

DIRECTOR Alejandro Loayza Grisi SHOWTIME September 30 @ 7PM

TYPE Narrative THEATRE Emerson Paramount Theatre

RUNNING TIME 76 minutes LANGUAGES Quechua / Spanish with English Subtitles

COUNTRY Bolivia / Uruguay / France RELEASE DATE 2022

FEATURING José Calcina; Luisa Quispe; Santos Choque



In the arid Bolivian highlands, an elderly Quechua couple has been living the same daily routine for years. While he takes their small herd of llamas out to graze, she keeps house and walks for miles with the other local women to fetch precious water. When an uncommonly long drought threatens everything they know, Virginio and Sisa must decide whether to stay and maintain their traditional way of life or admit defeat and move to the city with their descendants. Their dilemma is precipitated by the arrival of their grandson Clever, who comes to visit with news. The three of them must face, each in their own way, the effects of a changing environment, the importance of tradition, and the meaning of life itself. This visually jaw-dropping debut feature by photographer-turned-filmmaker Alejandro Loayza Grisi is lensed by award-winning cinematographer Barbara Alvarez (Lucretia Martel’s The Headless Woman) and won the Grand Jury Prize (World Cinema Dramatic) at the Sundance Film Festival.

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Q&A with director after screening.


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