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Marco Carpio
DIRECTOR
Visual artist with a strong interest in cultures deeply integrated with nature. He transforms lived experience into emotionally resonant and innovative works marked by sensitivity. At the age of sixteen, on the beach where he grew up, he witnessed the construction of a large totora reed raft intended to cross the Pacific Ocean. He offered his two pet caimans (small alligators) as amulets for the voyage. He never recovered them, yet he continued to dream of embarking on a similar expedition himself.
Andanía is his first feature-length film; its screenplay was awarded prizes in both the development and production categories of the National Film Competition
of the Peruvian Ministry of Culture.
Daniela Laínez del Pozo
CO-DIRECTOR & PRODUCER
Conservation scientist and photographer. Her ethnographic research in marine protected areas gave
rise to Andanía, her first feature-length documentary currently in production, with support from the Peruvian Ministry of Culture (MINCUL) and Parks Service (SERNANP). Through film, she seeks to bring visibility
to the environmental challenges faced by coastal communities. She has led conservation projects and expeditions in remote protected areas. Her work has
been recognised with the Dudley Stamp Award of the Royal Geographical Society (UK) and the WWF Russell
E. Train Faculty Fellowship. She is a member of the international Homeward Bound network of women scientists working on climate change.



Maria Fe
Salazar de la Fuente
CO-EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
A specialist in human-centered innovation, she holds a master’s degree from the University of the Arts London. She served as a trustee of The Anglo Peruvian Society in the United Kingdom, where she supported fundraising through cultural events linked to sustainable development in Peru. As Co-Executive Producer of Andanía, she brings a strategic perspective to strengthening partnerships, visibility, and impact.

Alessandro
Basile Lemaitre
ADVISOR
A film and television director and producer, he served as Director of the Cartagena International Film Festival (FICCI) and is recognized for his trajectory in the Colombian audiovisual sector, including the co-direction of Déjala Morir: La Niña Emilia. He is also the founder of Fundación Canoa, whose mission was to safeguard the intangible cultural heritage associated with the ancestral knowledge of Caribbean boatbuilding and seafaring.