Altiplano (film)


Altiplano is a 2009 film by Peter Brosens and Jessica Woodworth starring Magaly Solier, Jasmin Tabatabai, and Olivier Gourmet. It takes places on three continents in five different languages. It tells the stories of two women in mourning and how their destinies merge.

Plot summary

Photographer Grace is devastated after being forced to take a picture of the killing of her guide in Iraq. Back in Belgium, she withdraws the picture after it had already been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Her husband Max is an oculist and leaves to work at an eye clinic in the Andes in Peru. A local mine spills mercury, causing many people of the nearby village of Turubamba to succumb to illness. Max and his fellow physicians suspect toxins to be the reason for the affliction. They decide to collect more data in Turubamba.
Meanwhile, Saturnina, a young woman from the village loses her fiancé to the contamination. Upon the physicians' arrival, Saturnina's fiancé's mother angrily rejects the doctors' request to examine the body. The villagers turn their rage on the doctors and stone Max to death. Saturnina leads an unsuccessful demonstration against the mine's truck drivers. After the mine's closure, Saturnina commits suicide by drinking mercury and films her death on the camera Max had dropped when he was killed.
Grace sets out on a journey to the place of Max's death. Saturnina's mother welcomes her and offers hospitality. Grace watches the video made by Saturnina. In the end, she partakes in Saturnina's funeral and finally ends her mourning over her husband.

Cast

Shooting took place on locations in Belgium and Peru for 43 days between June and October 2008. Due to extreme weather conditions at an altitude of 5,000 metres in the Peruvian Andes, the crew and cast had access to a medical team 24 hours a day.
Although the film is fictional, it is inspired by true events that took place in the year 2000 in a Peruvian village of Choropampa District. Furthermore, some characters like Saturnina and Max are also based on reports and anecdotes of local villagers and foreign doctors.

Reception and awards

The film has garnered mainly positive responses. It has also won a number of independent film awards:
Altiplano was nominated for two Magritte Awards in the category of Best Film in Coproduction and Best Costume Design for Christophe Pidre and Florence Scholtes in 2011.