Article 59MHX Song Without a Name review – heart-rending story of Peruvian baby trafficking

Song Without a Name review – heart-rending story of Peruvian baby trafficking

by
Peter Bradshaw
from World news | The Guardian on (#59MHX)

An indigenous woman has her newborn child stolen by a fake maternity clinic in this desperately sad account of real-life events in the 1980s

This feature debut from Peruvian film-maker Melina Leon, first shown in the Directors' Fortnight sidebar at last year's Cannes film festival, is beautifully shot in black and white. It is an intimately painful and quite terrifying drama set in the late 1980s - the era of Peru's Shining Path terrorist insurgency - and drawn from real life.

Pamela Mendoza plays Georgina, an indigenous Peruvian woman who is heavily pregnant and one day hears a radio ad for a supposed charity clinic" offering free maternity services. On going into labour, she gratefully goes to this place, with its plausible-looking medical people in white coats who remove her baby, explaining it has to be taken to hospital for checkups" and that she should go home. When Georgina returns the next day, the clinic" is an empty shell, cleaned out, and the baby sold for adoption on fake papers to wealthy buyers from abroad. The horrified and desperate Georgina, whose indigenous status makes her almost less than human, is all but ignored by the authorities who not-so-secretly believe that the babies are anyway better off with the new (white) parents. So Georgina contacts a journalist, Pedro (Tommy Parraga), a shy, gay man whose editor is only too glad to put him on to this safe human interest" feature, and away from the more difficult politically charged investigation he'd been working on.

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