A young nun sets off on a poetic, mystical pilgrimage to save her dying congregation, encountering others whose own trials of faith, privilege, and contradiction mirror her haunting search for divine meaning in a fractured, material world.

Moving between the mystical, the poetic, and the deeply existential, Oca follows Rafaela (Natalia Solián), a devoted young nun who experiences visions and dreams. She embarks on a journey to a distant town where a new archbishop has recently been appointed. Rafaela belongs to a dwindling congregation, Las Marianas, of which only three sisters remain, and her superior insists she only come back with good news regarding its survival.
The film thus builds a narrative of pilgrimage, towards both a geographical destination and the most intimate concepts of — and doubts about — faith. Along the way, the nun encounters various characters: a group of pilgrims with whom she briefly travels, but who reveal their selfishness when they refuse to help her; a paratrooper with whom she shares ideas and silences; and a woman married to an influential man who represents the arena of privilege. Each encounter becomes a trial, a mirror, and a physical and spiritual detour.
Rafaela’s challenging faceoffs with the complex human condition reveal the pain of sustaining a spiritual calling in a broken and material world. She wonders about the wind, about God's signs, and whether divine intentions can shift, just as the wind does. The answers may lie just beyond her grasp.
DIANA CADAVID
Screenings
Scotiabank 8
Scotiabank 3
Scotiabank 9