Winaypacha Site
Catacora uses sound masterfully. There is no score. Instead, we hear the howl of the wind, the crunch of dry earth under worn sandals, the labored breathing of old lungs, and the occasional, desperate cry of a lonely bird. This sonic austerity deepens the sense of abandonment. Vicente Catacora and Hermelinda Lupa do not act; they exist . Every wrinkle, every trembling hand, every exhausted glance speaks of a real life lived under a harsh sun. There is one devastating sequence where Phaxsi tries to weave a traditional textile—her last link to identity—but her arthritic fingers can no longer hold the needle. Her quiet frustration is more powerful than any monologue. Similarly, Fermín’s silent tears when he realizes his body can no longer carry a bundle of firewood are unforgettable. Themes: More Than Just Old Age While Winaypacha is superficially about the elderly, it is truly about cultural extinction . The Aymara language, once dominant in the region, is heard here without subtitles (for native speakers) and with a deliberate opacity for outsiders. The couple’s rituals—coca leaf readings, offerings to the Pachamama (Earth Mother), and llama sacrifices—are shown not as exotic folklore but as dying breaths of a worldview.
★★★★½ (4.5/5) Essential viewing for patient cinephiles and anyone concerned with the disappearance of the world’s ancient cultures. Winaypacha
The narrative unfolds in real-time, day after day, as the dry season intensifies. A single potato is shared as a feast. A missing llama becomes a silent tragedy. The film’s tension comes not from action but from the creeping realization that these two people are living the last chapter of a centuries-old lineage. The title Winaypacha —an Aymara word meaning "eternal shadow" or "forever"—becomes an ironic lament. Óscar Catacora, who was only 26 when he made this film, demonstrates a patience rarely seen in cinema. He shot the movie in his own hometown (Santa Rosa de Chocco, Acora) using non-professional actors—his own grandparents, Vicente Catacora and Hermelinda Lupa. The camera is almost always static, placed at a respectful distance, observing the couple as if we were anthropologists or spirits. The wide shots of the altiplano are breathtaking but hostile: an endless, beige horizon under a gray-white sky, where no trees grow and no neighbors appear. Catacora uses sound masterfully
Director: Óscar Catacora Country: Peru Language: Aymara (with Spanish subtitles in original release) Runtime: 86 minutes This sonic austerity deepens the sense of abandonment
In an era of high-octane blockbusters and dialogue-driven dramas, Óscar Catacora’s Winaypacha (2017) stands as a radical, almost meditative anomaly. Filmed in the high-altitude plains of the Peruvian altiplano near Lake Titicaca, this film is not merely watched—it is endured and felt . It is a stark, neorealist masterpiece that chronicles the final days of an elderly Aymara couple, Fermín and Phaxsi, as they face starvation, isolation, and the slow erasure of their culture. The film has no conventional plot. There is no hero’s journey, no antagonist, and very little dialogue. Instead, we follow two septuagenarians living alone in a windswept, stone-walled hut. Their adult son left years ago to find work in the city and never returned. Now, weakened by age, they struggle to perform the basic tasks of survival: herding a few remaining llamas, digging for bitter potatoes in frozen soil, and fetching water from a distant spring.