World News

The Lost Film of Panama: Indigenous Kuna reclaim their voice | Documentary

Share
Share

Fifty years after a documentary film was confiscated by a bank, the Indigenous Kuna people of Panama reclaim their story.

A French filmmaker’s promise to an Indigenous community in Panama is shattered when his documentary disappears. The Kuna people had opened their lives to be documented in 1975 but never knew that production had dried up and the film reels had been seized by a bank.

For half a century, the community searched for the lost footage as its story became a legend passed down from elders to younger generations. Decades later, decaying reels are discovered in the Panamanian Ministry of Culture, and a hidden copy of the film resurfaces in Paris. As elders recount the filmmaking process, a new generation rises to reclaim their cultural narrative.

The Lost Film of Panama is a documentary by Andres Peyrot.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles
Video: Foreign nationals evacuated from Israel arrive in Bulgaria | Aviation
World News

Video: Foreign nationals evacuated from Israel arrive in Bulgaria | Aviation

NewsFeed A number of foreign- and dual-nationality citizens evacuated from Israel have...

Kenyan police shoot bystander at close range during latest protests | Protests News
World News

Kenyan police shoot bystander at close range during latest protests | Protests News

Security forces and hundreds of men armed with whips and clubs clashed...

Trump “more likely to escalate” attack on Iran than stop it | Al Jazeera
World News

Trump “more likely to escalate” attack on Iran than stop it | Al Jazeera

Ali Vaez says Trump is the only one who could halt Israel’s...