Spectators sit in boats watching a film projected on a screen set up on a wooden structure during the Muyuna Floating Film Festival in the Belen neighborhood of Iquitos, Peru, Saturday, May 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
Children are reflected in a mirror of vendor Manolo Apagueno as he walks past in the Belen neighborhood of Iquitos, Peru, Saturday May 25, 2024. The Indigenous community in the heart of Peru's Amazon known as the "Venice of the Jungle" is hosting the Muyuna Floating Film Festival, celebrating tropical forests. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
Mototaxis circulate in the Belen neighborhood of Iquitos, Peru, Sunday, May 26, 2024. The Indigenous community in the heart of Peru's Amazon is hosting the Muyuna Floating Film Festival, that showcases films from tropical forests. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
Spectators sit in boats watching a film projected on a screen set up on a wooden structure during the Muyuna Floating Film Festival in the Belen neighborhood of Iquitos, Peru, Saturday, May 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
Children are reflected in a mirror of vendor Manolo Apagueno as he walks past in the Belen neighborhood of Iquitos, Peru, Saturday May 25, 2024. The Indigenous community in the heart of Peru's Amazon known as the "Venice of the Jungle" is hosting the Muyuna Floating Film Festival, celebrating tropical forests. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
Mototaxis circulate in the Belen neighborhood of Iquitos, Peru, Sunday, May 26, 2024. The Indigenous community in the heart of Peru's Amazon is hosting the Muyuna Floating Film Festival, that showcases films from tropical forests. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
BELÉN, Peru (AP) — In the heart of Peru’s Amazon region, a poor neighborhood put aside the trials and tribulations of everyday life and celebrated an international film festival with works from countries with tropical forests.
Many who attended the 10-day event had never seen a movie on the big screen, and the one used for the festival was itself unique due to the area’s geography.
“The festival aims to be a tribute to the jungles of the world and its people, to the Indigenous communities, in which we believe lies the answer to the challenges and destruction that forests face now that everyone is talking about climate change,†Daniel MartÃnez-Quintanilla, co-executive director of the festival that ends Sunday, said.
So, members of the Muyuna Floating Film Festival — muyuna in the Quechua language means “a whirlpool formed in mighty rivers†— set the screen on a 10- meter (33-foot) high wooden structure, allowing residents to enjoy the films from their canoes or the windows of their homes.
People fish by making holes in the wooden floors of their houses, which forces mothers to keep a watchful eye over their children who do not yet know how to swim so that they don't fall into the water and drown. Health authorities have reported malnutrition and diarrhea are common due to lack of drinking water.
MartÃnez-Quintanilla said the event included films from Thailand, Brazil, Taiwan, Panama and other countries with tropical forests, as well as others made by young Peruvians.
The works screened included the Peruvian animated short film “The Engine and the Melody,†which tells the story of an ant that fells Amazonian trees and a cicada that manages to regenerate the forest by playing a prodigious flute — until everything changes when a forest fire occurs.