Priscila Tapajowara
Directing
Known For

Using the camera as a weapon to defend their ancestral land in Brazil, three women of the Daje Kapap Eypi audiovisual collective lovingly record their Munduruku traditions and their mythology of humans transforming into forest plants and animals.
Mundurukuyü – The Forest of the Fish Women

No description available.
Tapajós Ãgawaraitá

Real stories of indigenous and riverside people from Amazonia, about the respectful relationship between traditional peoples with the forest and the enchanted ones, sacred beings who have a great influence on the daily life and spirituality of those who live in the forest.
Ãgawaraitá: Mãe do Igarapé
The Warao people break through the boundaries created by colonization, inhabiting the city, occupying the streets, occupying the banks of the river, occupying the fringes of society. Looking toward the future of their people, they sing to heal, to love, to dream, and to make the rain come. In the outskirts of São Luís, a people inhabit a space with their territorial ancestry. And they celebrate a new ally: the sea of Brazilian Jamaica.
Os Warao de Upaon-Açu

No description available.