The Colombian government is teaming up with British producer Simon Chen to produce a documentary about the survival of four children who went missing in the jungles of Colombia after their small plane crashed for 40 days. Colombian President Gustavo Pedro, the day before yesterday.
Pedro responded to a journalist’s question about the possibility of producing a work based on the story of children: Leslie (13 years old), Solini (nine years old), Tian Noriel (five years old) and Christine (one year old): “I had the first meeting with a producer who won two Oscars in the field. was
“You have to talk to the children’s families and indigenous groups and open the archival image bank,” Pietro said from Paris, where he was attending a summit for a “new global financial deal.”
Last Thursday, the Colombian president released a film with Simon Chen, whose two productions, “Man on Wire” (2008) and “Searching for Sugar Man” (2012), won two Oscars. Sen tweeted on his Twitter account: “Thank you very much, President. I am honored to produce a documentary based on this inspiring story.
The Central Military Hospital in Bogota, where the children are recovering, indicated in its latest report that they were still in the recovery phase “with their loss of appetite and weight gain”.
However, “Wilson”, the sniffer dog who played a key role in finding the children, is still missing. About 70 soldiers are working to find the six-year-old Belgian Shepherd dog. More than 100,000 people on Change.org have called on the government to “not stop efforts to find the brave puppy”. The Army indicated that the search operation would continue for a “logical” period.
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