Francisca Alegría’s Sundance Eco-Fable “The Cow Who Sang a Song Into the Future” Secures Distribution
“The Cow Who Sang a Song Into the Future,” Chilean director Francisca Alegría’s first feature, is coming to theaters. North American distribution rights to the “environmental fable” were secured by Kino Lorber, a press release announced. A theatrical release for the Sundance 2022 selection is being planned for later this year.
In an interview, Alegría told Women and Hollywood that “The Cow Who Sang a Song Into the Future” is set in “a wounded world, where animals sing songs before they die.” She revealed, “a mysterious woman comes back from the dead to reconnect with her family, and eventually heal the broken bond with the daughter she left behind.”
Written by Alegría, Fernanda Urrejola (“Party of Five”), and Manuela Infante (“Invisible Heroes”), the story takes place against the backdrop of a river in southern Chile, where fish are dying due to pollution from a nearby cellulose factory. Kino Lorber describes “The Cow Who Sang” as a “lyrical rumination on family, renewal, and resurrection” and as “an ambitious proposal for acceptance and healing, suggesting that the dead return when they are most needed.”
The film premiered in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition at Sundance in January. The Sundance Screenwriters and Directors Labs selectee has also screened at Luxembourg City Film Festival and Miami Film Festival, among others. Mia Maestro (“Mayans M.C.”), Leonor Varela (“Dallas”), and newcomer Enzo Ferrada Rosati star, and the producers include Alejandra García (“Spider”) and Viola Fügen (“Memoria”).
“We were immediately seduced by Francisca Alegría’s unique vision, and look forward to sharing this heady blend of ecological and familial themes reimagined through a magical realist lens,” said Kino Lorber SVP Wendy Lidell.
“I feel very fortunate that Kino Lorber will distribute my first feature film in North America,” Alegría added. “The film came from a very personal place so it’s particularly special that Kino Lorber will bring it to audiences, given their commitment to showcasing new voices and curating work that remains truthful to art house cinema.”
Alegría’s 2016 short “And the Whole Sky Fit in the Dead Cow’s Eye” won the Short Film Jury Award – International Fiction at Sundance and was named Best Latin American Short Film at Miami Film Festival. The magical realist ghost story was also selected for TIFF, Telluride, and New York Film Festival.