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Sangue di condor

Titolo originale: Yawar Mallku
  • 1969
  • T
  • 1h 10min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,1/10
668
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Sangue di condor (1969)
CrimeDrama

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe reaction of an indigenous community against a group of foreigners who under the guise of development assistance are forcibly sterilizing the peasant women.The reaction of an indigenous community against a group of foreigners who under the guise of development assistance are forcibly sterilizing the peasant women.The reaction of an indigenous community against a group of foreigners who under the guise of development assistance are forcibly sterilizing the peasant women.

  • Regia
    • Jorge Sanjinés
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Jorge Sanjinés
    • Óscar Soria
  • Star
    • Marcelino Yanahuaya
    • Benedicta Mendoza
    • Vicente Verneros Salinas
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,1/10
    668
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jorge Sanjinés
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jorge Sanjinés
      • Óscar Soria
    • Star
      • Marcelino Yanahuaya
      • Benedicta Mendoza
      • Vicente Verneros Salinas
    • 6Recensioni degli utenti
    • 4Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 vittorie totali

    Foto3

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    Interpreti principali14

    Modifica
    Marcelino Yanahuaya
    • Ignacio Mallku
    Benedicta Mendoza
    • Paulina
    • (as Benedicta Mendoza Huanca)
    Vicente Verneros Salinas
    • Sixto Mallku
    • (as Vicente Verneros)
    Danielle Caillet
    Felipe Vargas
    Jose Arce
    Mario Arrieta
    Ilde Artes
    Carlos Cervantes
    Luis Ergueta
    Javier Fernandez
    Adela Penaranda
    Julio Quispe
    Humberto Vera
    • Regia
      • Jorge Sanjinés
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jorge Sanjinés
      • Óscar Soria
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti6

    7,1668
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    dbdumonteil

    This is genocide

    Instant karma: the Peace Corps were ordered to leave Bolivia two years after the movie was released.

    It could be the subject of a horror movie if it were not based on historical facts:a humanitarian organization sterilizes Indian women from Bolivia unbeknown to them.Shot in black and white,with a shoestring budget ,the movie retains enough strength to grab-and to make their mind revolt-today's audience.

    A precise depiction of the way of life of these people who are still living in autocracy (see the scene when the woman refuses to sell all her eggs to the "doctors")and whose civilization is still based on their religious beliefs which they use to understand the mysterious things which happen to their wives (the coca leaves).

    It's also a -reasonably justified-plea for a square deal for the underprivileged :the man's run ,searching desperately blood for his brother who can't have an operation .The short sequence in which the poor lad sees the rich people playing tennis or swimming in the pool shows what Bunuel would call "Le Charme (not so) Discret De La Bourgeoisie".
    8JoshuaDysart

    Foundational Third Cinema

    A radical, marxist, revolutionary, foundational Third Cinema attack on Western values and U.S. cultural imperialism, Jorge Sanjinés' Blood of the Condor had a profound impact on Bolivian politics at the time of its release and still casts a shadow across Latin American polity to this day.

    The film's accusations that U.S. Peace Corps volunteers sterilized indigenous women of the Quechua ethnic group inspired widespread protests during the late 1960's, stoked long-simmering anti-U.S. attitudes in Latin America, and led to the removal of the Peace Corps from Bolivia altogether.

    The film is passionately told from the indigenous people's perspective and is driven by an anger that tilts it away from investigative exploration and towards propaganda. This is, of course, the very nature of Third Cinema, so I only mean to describe the thing itself, not level criticism. I use the term "propaganda" in its purest definition.

    This movie willfully paints the situation as a parable of the noble indigenous against the cruel, alien, indifference of the Euro-Amercan matrix. And the fact is, U.S. cultural imperialism's hubris and ignorance did lead to a complete breakdown in Bolivian/American relations at the time.

    Molly Geidel, author of, "Peace Corps Fantasies: How Development Shaped the Global Sixties" found documents decades later clearly showing that the Bolivia Peace Corps director and volunteers with the agency, inserted IUDs in indigenous Aymara women at the time, despite not always having medical credentials and not being able to communicate well with the women.

    So, it would seem that it wasn't the large-scale premeditated sterilization of a people that this film would have you believe, but none-the-less, an incredibly problematic policy practiced by the U.S. Peace Corps. It's not a long walk from nonconsensual contraception to accusations of population control. But the true story gets more complicated.

    Long after this movie was released, a 2002 report by Peruvian Health Minister Fernando Carbone suggested that the president of neighboring Peru, all around asshole Alberto Fujimor, was involved in the forced sterilizations of up to 300,000 Quechua and Aymara women between 1996 and 2000 as part of a population control program called "Voluntary Surgical Contraception".

    The United Nations and other international aid agencies supported this campaign, and yes, USAID provided funding and training for it. Whether these Western NGO's and Orgs were told that it was a voluntary family planning program (as the title suggested) or they knew it was a crime against humanity, I can't say.

    The point is, the conspiracy theories this film uses to push its political agenda are based on either an eventual truth, or an ongoing truth that we simply don't have the full reportage of. So the movie's anger is prophetic or timely, but regardless, righteous.

    Such programs of sterilization and contraception have led to heightened popular suspicion of birth control in Bolivia, Peru, and other parts of Latin America, where people continue to associate it with imperialist colonization of the human body. (We would be remiss if we didn't add the Catholic church's vilification of birth control and reproductive family planning to this paragraph as well.)

    But Sanjinés rage is really aimed at all of the U.S.A and Europe's collective sins committed on the South American mind and body in the name of economic and military control. So it's hard to blame him when he shows a complete disinterest in understanding the full complications of the cultural conflict in his moment of creative revolutionary filmmaking fervor.

    An artist does not mobilize their side or empower their "ism" by making a film about the "inherent fallibility of the Western savior complex". No, they cast Americans as evil. Otherwise their argument will be too complex, not base enough, it will not make use of core emotions to activate the people, it will appeal only to their intellect. It will not truly be revolutionary cinema.

    Taken solely as a movie, this is a pretty exciting living document. It vibrates with authenticity. Non-actor Quechua people represent their culture and their language. We see scenes filmed amongst the extraordinary vistas of the Bolivian mountain ranges. And we get a pointed and interesting Bicycle Thieves like social narrative aimed at a capitalistic healthcare system that seems to be just another weapon used to murder the indigenous. The movie's spirit is strong and concise, and much of its roughshod filmmaking is quite bold.

    It employs a flashback structure. We learn about events after we've seen the outcomes of them, and I came across an interesting story about that.

    After screening the film many viewers from lower income communities, with less exposure to cinema and less formal education, the very people Sanjinés was hoping to represent, voiced criticisms that they had difficulty following the flashback style narration. Sanjinés was greatly influenced by European art cinema when he was younger, hence his ambitious story structure for this film, but the criticism of the "peasants" woke in him a new realization.

    Later he would say, "We cannot attack the ideology of imperialism by using its own formal tricks and dishonest techniques, whose raison d'être is to stupefy and deceive. Not only do such methods violate revolutionary morality; they also correspond structurally to the ideology and content of imperialism."

    In response, Sanjinés moved away from the notion of Auteur cinema ("Revolutionary cinema, as it reaches maturity, can only be collective, just as the revolution itself is collective.") and ditched complex arthouse formalism in favor of a filmmaking style built for easy consumption so he could have the most political impact.

    Lastly, there's an extremely interesting chapter in the book, "Cinema and Social Change in Latin America: Conversations with Filmmakers" which describes the difficulty Jorge Sanjinés' had in gaining the trust of the Quechua people to participate in filming. It's interesting to see the revolutionary as an outsider. As the other, hoping to capture the image of a people for his own political ends. He wanted to give the people a voice, but it's hard not to think of the intellectual descending among the proletariat to rouse their ire.

    All in all, this is a really great piece of historical cinema.
    6plur2k

    Guerilla filmmaking with almost no production value. Artistic and paranoid. A must see for every film student!

    The editing and cinematography are of renegade or guerilla filmmaking. The film has almost no production value of any kind. Blood of the Condor is amazingly artistic and complements the paranoia of the plot. This film is must see for every film student and amateur filmmaker!
    8camilo-7

    great movie of the 60's

    considering the turmoil in latinamerica in the late 60's, it's not hard to imagine a film like this being made. It's now, in the new century, that the real value comes afloat, and thanks to this little piece of Bolivian cinematography we can recall not only the political and social sensation in those times, but also understand some of the new up comings in that country, considering that it has only been months since Evo Morales arrived at the presidency.

    Not a movie for a typical Hollywood style viewer, but anyone who values the social struggle and the making of low-cost films with great power and meaning will like this movie. Sadly it's very hard to get, but that will always be the problem with such movies.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      In the film, the Progress Corps is a thinly-veiled reference to the US Peace Corps. After the film's release, the Peace Corps was expelled from Bolivia in 1971. Reports that they had sterilized poor Bolivians were fiction but the film created enough controversy to warrant kicking them out.
    • Blooper
      The English subtitles translate the NGO's name as "Peace Corps" - although they are clearly based on the Peace Corps, the film features a fictional agency called Cuerpo del Progreso ("Progress Corps").
    • Connessioni
      Featured in New Cinema of Latin America: Cinema of the Humble (1983)
    • Colonne sonore
      Nacido para ser salvaje
      by Los Clímax

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 1974 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Bolivia
    • Sito ufficiale
      • Fundación Grupo Ukamau
    • Lingue
      • Spagnolo
      • Quechua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Blood of the Condor
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Bolivia
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Grupo Ukamau
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 10 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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