Dir.: Gonzalo Arijón
Zeigeist Films
On October 12, 1972, a Fairchild F 227 airplane from the
Uruguayan Air Force took off from Montevideo in
the direction of Santiago de Chile carrying a team of amateur rugby players from
Carrasco, a suburb of the Uruguayan capital, Montevideo,
to play a friendly match in Santiago.
The bad weather forced them to make a stopover in Mendoza, Argentina.
The next day, shortly after resuming its journey, the plane lost contact with
the control tower.
For 10 days the search and rescue teams sent out by Argentina,
Chile and Uruguay could
find no trace of the plane and its passengers. Particularly heavy snowfalls had
all but buried the white-roofed wreck of the plane, making it almost invisible
from the air. Nobody believed that there was any hope of finding any of the 45
crash victims.
Ten weeks later, a shepherd herding his flock in a high Andean valley saw the
outline of two men in the distance, waving their arms to attract his attention.
After the rescue, at a noisy press conference, the survivors admitted that they
had been obliged to eat "the bodies of our friends" in order to
survive. The world's media, gathered to hear their story, was stunned.
How did they survive the appalling conditions at 4.000 metres? How did they
organize their daily lives during the ordeal? How did two of them manage to get
out of there on foot to fetch a rescue party? This is a story that transcends
the personal, a philosophical tale about the importance of friendship and
solidarity in extreme situations.