MEADOWLARKS


Augusto Zegarra‘s heartwarming first feature follows a father who yearns to bring the joy of The Lion King to millions of children in their language, Quechua. RUNA SIMI is a bona fide David and Goliath story.
Voice actor and radio host Fernando Valencia lives in Cusco, Peru, with his young son, Dylan. After his dubbing clips went viral, Fernando embarks on a journey to have Disney agree to let him dub the entirety of Simba’s story. It is an uphill battle.
Quechua has slowly been branded a lower-class language. Some children are still teased for speaking it. In reality, there are approximately 10 million Quechua speakers across six South American countries.
We meet Fernando’s mother. We discover the parallels between his childhood and Simba’s. Fernando tries to call Disney but reaches the legal department’s voicemail again and again. After a barrage of DMs to all corporate arms, it is one message to The Lion King’s director, Rob Minkoff, that finally gets traction. Minkoff gives Fernando the reality check we fear in our gut, but he does think the idea has legs and comes from the right place.
To any Disney fan or parent watching, this idea seems like a no-brainer. If you expose more people to films, your revenue and brand thrive. As a former employee of the company (on the performance side), I can tell you their contracts are ironclad and very lengthy. You will undoubtedly find yourself rooting for Fernando’s mission. Defying all the odds and the lawyers’ advice, Fernando gathers a local Quechua cast, including little Dylan as young Simba, creating a dazzling version of the beloved tale in his studio. The result is a triumph.
I am fully aware of the irony of how I know Cusco. It is the setting for the Disney film The Emperor’s New Groove. Renzo Rivas‘s camerawork is patient and breathtaking. In wide shots of the Peruvian landscape, Fernando honors the spirits of nature and has deep discussions with his son. Fernando is the kind of parent we all strive to be. He imbues the importance of all things, big and small, creating a safe place for empathy and learning.
Fernando is trying to preserve not just the Quechua language but his people’s culture and identity. RUNA SIMI is a celebration of family and the importance of our past. One of the film’s most poignant moments comes at a dubbing conference where Fernando shows clips to an audience of Indigenous speakers. The pure delight on the faces of the viewers is beyond magic.
RUNA SIMI is another stunning example of why representation matters. If a child can see themselves on the screen, they can dream bigger. But it is also about access and equity. Indigenous voices are vital in our quest for authentic storytelling. Tribeca 2025 audiences, get ready for a warm hug of nostalgia while cheering for a genuine hero. “Every child in the world has a right to entertainment.” Full stop.
RUNA SIMI. Peru, 2025, 81 min. In Spanish, Quechua, and English with English
Subtitles.Written and directed by Augusto Zegarra
Producers: Claudia Chávez Lévano
and Paloma IturriagaExecutive Producers: Ellen Schneider, Benjamin Bratt, Peter
Bratt, Alpita Patel,Dominique Bravo, Bill and Ruth Ann Harnisch.Production Company: Alaska 88
Director of Photography: Renzo Rivas
Editor: Carlos Rojas Felice
Composer: Pauchi Sasaki.
Main subjects:
Fernando Valencia, Dylan Valencia.About the Director:
Augusto Zegarra is a Peruvian filmmaker based in Lima with a BFA in Film and Media Arts from the University of Utah. His first short film, Wiñaymanta, was one of the winners of the Ministry of Culture of Peru National Prize in 2014. With a deep passion for storytelling, he uses film as a tool to explore identity, language, and memory. In 2017, he started the research for his first feature-length film Runa Simi, later produced with support from the Ministry of Culture of Peru, the Sundance Institute, the Embassy of Switzerland in Peru, CineLatino of Rencontres Toulouse and Storyboard Collective. Runa Simi has participated at the IDFA Forum (Rough Cut), GLAFF WIP, DocsBarcelona, ChileConecta, ARCA Residency in Cabo de Hornos, and FIFDH Impact Lab.
World Premiere: Spotlight Documentary Section
Sabrina Van Tassel‘s TRIBECA 2024 documentary MISSING FROM FIRE TRAIL ROAD speaks for those without a voice. Indigenous women are in crisis. Why aren’t we talking about the statistics of missing native women? The number is vastly higher than any other group in the United States.
The film focuses on the story of Mary Ellen Johnson Davis, missing since 2020, as her family tries to piece together all the information they can, while also showing up for those in their community with similar circumstances. There are far too many unexplained disappearances and deaths for one community not to call it an epidemic. The reservation has its own justice system, under which not a single white man has been prosecuted in connection to a disappearance. Families must rely on the Feds to intervene. They never do. It is endless, lawless mayhem.
Story after story, family after family, one thread connects them all. That is abuse from white outsiders. You can’t tell this story without delving into the trauma of native children stolen from their families and physically and emotionally tormented in boarding schools. MISSING FROM FIRE TRAIL ROAD delivers the horrific truth through the words of survivors. A quote from a manual given to households when children the government was ripping from their homes reads, “The goal is not to make scientists, or doctors or lawyers out of these citizens. The goal is to make domestic housewives and farmers and laborers.” Keeping the population suppressed remains the goal. It’s cyclical genocide. It is the continuation of colonization, plain and simple.
The question remains. How many of these documentaries need to be made to get the message across? Tribeca 2024 audiences can share the native plight and, perhaps, move the dial toward justice. Do something.
Remaining Screenings of MISSING FROM FIRE TRAIL ROAD:
Saturday, June 15 – 11:00 AM: AMC 19th St. East 6
Mary Ellen Johnson Davis has been missing since the eve of Thanksgiving 2020 from the Tulalip Reservation. She is only one of hundreds of Native American women who continue to go missing in the U.S. As director Sabrina Van Tassel (“The State of Texas vs Melissa”) investigates Mary Ellen’s case, dozens of Native women speak up about the violence suffered and observed by them.
Executive Produced and featuring Deborah Parker, activist and indigenous leader, Deb Haaland, US Secretary of the Interior, to many of Mary Ellen’s friends and family, the film threads a haunting but important report about these underlooked cases and the urgency for attention and action in these investigations.
MISSING FROM FIRE TRAIL ROAD
The quiet of a snowy Indigenous community is upended by the arrival of the mining company WEC who have signed an agreement to drill the land. But before drilling starts, WEC employees begin to turn up dead, attacked by a mysterious force. As a local peace officer and a park ranger investigate, they come face to face with the vengeful spirits that have haunted the land for generations.
BITS 2021 audiences got an eyeful this weekend with indigenous tradition and terror. This complex story of activism and horror hits on more levels than you expect. Don’t Say Its Name utilizes local talent to cement its authenticity. Violet spirits collide with capitalism on a reservation attempting to maintain its soul. A mining company is corrupting the land. Both nature and the community will not have it.
Two kickass female leads in one film? Thank you. The cast generally consists of more women, and I am not complaining. It’s inspiring to watch these actresses communicate with each other. Leads, Sera-Lys McArthur and Madison Walsh will make you stand up and yell, “F@ck Yeah!” Of course, we cannot forget the horror element that provides genuine jump scares and grounded storytelling. For gore fans, there is plenty of blood from the very beginning. The practical FX are classic. The terror factor alongside cultural erasure makes Don’t Say Its Name a fascinating watch. Add it to the growing list of great Canadian horror.
Blood in the Snow Film Festival 2021 is taking place on Super Channel Oct 29 to 31st and at the Royal Cinema Nov 18 to 23rd, 2021
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