• Seattle Int'l Film Festival

    Best Director
  • San Francisco Int'l LGBTQ Film Fest

    Best First Feature Nominee
  • Cartagena de Indias Film Festival

    Special Prize
  • Connecticut Out Film

    Best Film
  • Toulouse Des-images-aux-mots

    Audience Award
  • Córdoba Film Week

    Audience Award
  • Campeche Film Festival

    Best Film
  • Outshine Fort Lauderdade

    Jury Award

Spanish and Zapotec with English subtitles

With Noé Hernández, Cuauhtli Jiménez, Erick Israel Consuelo

Why will your students love Finlandia? Because it’s a work of art in itself—a vibrant visual poem—it invites you on an intimate journey to reflect on what it means to be a Muxe or Muxhe, Zapotec Indigenous third-gender individuals who have existed in southern Mexico for centuries. Muxes last gained international recognition for their crucial role in rescue efforts following the 2017 Juchitán earthquake. Because of the machista culture in Mexico, Muxes are often seen in caregiver roles and are respected for their work as well as their identity.

Belonging to a community of muxes fighting to reclaim their gender beyond the binary spectrum, Delirio, Amaranta, and Mariano go through their past, present, and future.

Marta, a designer, embarks on a journey to Oaxaca to document its rich traditions. As she navigates the fine line between admiration and cultural appropriation, her perception of reality—and herself—begins to shift. Living among the muxes, she is drawn to their struggles, passions, and unspoken traumas. Immersed in their world, Marta must confront her assumptions, desires, and a deeper meaning of belonging.

When a powerful earthquake shatters their world, they must confront not just the physical destruction, but also the deeper tremors of identity, resilience, and self-expression in a society that both reveres and resists them.

A visually stunning and deeply moving exploration of love, struggle, and the defiant beauty of being oneself, Finlandia is a cinematic ode to the strength of those who dare to live authentically.

Press

“A tale of memory, mysticism, and the master creativity of the Muxe. A multifaceted drama filled with life, love, and despair; a glorious explosion of creativity and cultural insight.” – Chad Armstrong, The Queer Review

“A sumptuous visual feast, enhanced by Alcalá’s background working for Cirque du Soleil.” – Doug Rule, Metro Weekly

Muxe is neither a man nor a woman; it is beyond that. In 2014, Mexico City became the first jurisdiction in the country to legally recognize the third gender on official documents. This recognition allows individuals to choose “gender not specified” on their identification documents, reflecting the commitment to inclusivity and respect for self-identified gender identities.” – Cindy Roaming, Medium

About the Director
Horacio Alcalá was born in Guadalajara, Mexico, in 1978. He is a film director and screenwriter, who trained at Inter-Universidad Europe in Italy and Germany. He gained experience through independent projects in Berlin, feature films in France, and short films and documentaries in Spain. His work has received international acclaim at prestigious festivals such as Boston, New York, Tokyo, and Palm Springs.

After seven years with Cirque du Soleil, Horacio moved to Madrid and began directing projects that blend plastic arts with circus narrative. He is currently developing documentary projects for the European Union through CBC (Cross Border Cooperation) programs and the TESIM program of the European Commission, while also directing short documentaries on human rights for UNHCR.

Notes on Film

“Finland is a country I love very much, and it represents a distant land. We all have a place we wish to go when faced with a problem, and it can even be a made-up name. In the film, I don’t refer to it as a nation, but as a faraway, cold land, opposite to the world of the muxes.”

– Horacio Alcalá, Director