Credits
at the end of the Mexican film The Other Conquest
(La Otra Conquista) tell us that the movie is about events
during the first years of the Spanish conquest of México
-- from the arrival of Don Hernán Cortés (1519) to the appearance
of the Virgin of Guadalupe (1531). Written and directed
by Salvador Carrasco, The Other Conquest is
an epic film in Spanish and the Aztec language of Náhuatl,
with the following tagline:
The
film deals with the two forms of conquest by the Spaniards
in attempting to subjugate the Aztecs -- the physical conquest
completed in 1521, in which eight million lives were lost
(some through butchery but most by succumbing to diseases
brought by the Spanish), and the spiritual conquest, in
which the Spanish succeeded in "converting" nine million
Aztecs to Christianity within two decades. The movie opens
with the death of an old man in Spain clutching a Bible,
evidently ambivalent about something; the man is Fray Diego
de La Coruña (played by Tomás José Carlos Rodríguez), who
tried to convert the most brilliant of the Aztec priests
to Christianity. (Here the film refers to a document placed
in the Bible known as the Valeriano Relation, written in
1560 by Nicán Mopohua, who was renamed Antonio Valeriano
by the Spanish, to record the events surrounding the appearance
of the Virgin of Guadalupe.) The film next focuses on the
Spanish conquest led by Cortés (played by Iñaki Aierra),
who overwhelms the Aztecs while they are engaging in the
ritual of human sacrifice at the capital of Tenochtitlán.
Soon, Topiltzin (played by Damián Delgado), an Aztec scribe,
is being flogged because of his defiance of the Spanish.
Aztec princess Tecuichpo (played by Elpidia Carrillo), whom
Cortés has renamed Doña Isabel, pleads for mercy for Topiltzin,
but Cortés not only forces himself on her sexually but also
insists on the brutal flogging, first with a whip and later
with a chain. The Aztec, however, does not cry out, as he
perceives that the eye in the icon of the Virgin has miraculously
blocked his pain and healed his wounds. Topiltzin is then
transferred to a monastery, where Friar Diego attempts to
convert him to Christianity and to accept the Spanish name
of Tomás. Topiltzin represents the primordial Mexican (as
it was Quauhtlatoatzin who saw the Virgin of Guadalupe and
insisted that a Catholic church be constructed over the
ruins of the Aztec religious shrine). He then engages in
a theological debate with Friar Diego, resembling a very
simplified version of The Disputation (1986),
a television movie featuring a dialog between a Christian
theologian and a Jewish theologian in Spain during the 1200s.
Topiltzin, however, commits only his body to the Virgin,
as he insists on keeping his mind free. Nevertheless, Topiltzin's
desire to hug the life-size Virgin icon becomes such an
obsession that he is first denied access and later dies
when able to do so. Before Topiltzin dies, however, he evidently
convinces Friar Diego that there is a higher God than the
God of Christianity, as the Friar's last words in Spain
are that he will go to the place where all souls (thus not
necessarily only Christians) go. The film has many epigrammatic
lines, a film score with Aztec music, and much symbolism.
The film clearly celebrates the survival of the pure Náhuatls
after more than 400 years, though the cinematography features
Tenayuca in Mexico City and Xochicalco in Morelos. Through
the resistance of Topiltzin, we can better understand why
the politics of México has been so anti-clerical although
most Mexicans are Catholics. La Otra Conquista,
which was first released in México during 1999, began its
run in Los Angeles on April 19, 2000. The film truly inspires
pride in being Mexican. MH