Nora de Izcue

Nora de Izcue

Birth : 1934-04-30, Lima, Perú

History

Nora de Izcue was born in 1934 in Peru. She is the first female director and writer of her country.

Profile

Nora de Izcue
Nora de Izcue

Movies

Responso Para un Abrazo: Tras la Huella de un Poeta
Writer
César Calvo was one of the great contemporary Peruvian poets belonging to the Generation of the 60s. His dazzling and moving, refined and musical poetry; profiled him as a character who over the years has become a legend.
Responso Para un Abrazo: Tras la Huella de un Poeta
Director
César Calvo was one of the great contemporary Peruvian poets belonging to the Generation of the 60s. His dazzling and moving, refined and musical poetry; profiled him as a character who over the years has become a legend.
El Viento de Todas Partes
Director
A politic documentary about Peru in 2000.
Elena Izcue: La armonía silenciosa
Director
The life and work of teacher Elena Izcue.
Color de Mujer
Director
Cecilia Cartajena, afroperuvian countrywoman gives a testimony of her life.
El viento del ayahuasca
Director
A love story of a sociologist and a girl from country in the magic-religious context of Amazon.
El Juancito
Director
Canción al viejo fisga que acecha en los lagos amazónicos
Writer
Following the Fisga in the solitary journey through the waters and exuberant nature of the Amazon, we witness the patient search for the fish that will feed his family, and his struggle to catch it.
Canción al viejo fisga que acecha en los lagos amazónicos
Director
Following the Fisga in the solitary journey through the waters and exuberant nature of the Amazon, we witness the patient search for the fish that will feed his family, and his struggle to catch it.
Runan Caycu
Screenplay
The first footage to register the quechua language, as a symbol of identidy, struggle and resistence.
Runan Caycu
Director
The first footage to register the quechua language, as a symbol of identidy, struggle and resistence.
Espejismo
Assistant Director
A young man inherits a broken down estate at the edge of the Peruvian desert, with no explanation about the former owners or what had become of the once thriving house.