



The bloodsucking lore of the chupacabra is getting the CGI treatment and rebranding itself into a cute and cuddly creature.
”Chupa” — an adventure-fantasy film directed by Mexican filmmaker Jonás Cuarón, co-writer of the Oscar-winning film “Gravity” and son of ”Roma” director Alfonso Cuarón — follows a shy 13-year-old Alex (Evan Whitten) who travels from Kansas City to Mexico to meet his grandfather Chava (Demián Bichir). On his grandfather’s ranch, Alex meets a new furry friend and the two embark on a whirlwind adventure.
Cuarón says working on “Chupa” (streaming now on Netflix) was not only exciting but a “very personal story for me.”
Growing up in Mexico in the ’90s, and being around the same age as Alex in the film, Cuarón pulled from his memory of the first time he heard of the legend of the chupacabra. ”As a kid, those things were exciting,” he says.
“He’ll be our little secret,” Chava tells Alex upon meeting the Chupa, who also warns him of “bad people out there” (scientist Richard Quinn, played by Christian Slater) hunting the misunderstood creature to try and harness his powers.
The chupacabra, which translates to goat-sucker in English, was reportedly first spotted in the early ’90s in Puerto Rico. As the story goes, sightings then spread across Latin America with people believing the creature attacked and drank the blood of livestock, including goats.
“There was a frightening element about it but there’s also so much curiosity and excitement about something magical being around you,” Cuarón says.
Adds Bichir, “It’s fascinating how Latin American culture works and how easy prey we are. That creature never existed, are you kidding me? That’s exactly why I think it’s brilliant, that we took that crazy time of our history and converted it into a beautiful fantasy.”
As oral historians, grandparents use their gift of storytelling to keep traditions alive, bestow unforgettable life lessons, and retell the folklore of their times. ”Growing up surrounded by two big Mexican families, I know that grandparents are truly the carriers of the family narrative,” Cuarón says.
“Chupa” is about the importance of “trusting your family in order to overcome grief and any other growing pains,” Bichir says. It’s about believing in yourself and reconnecting with your roots. ”I don’t see this as a Latino or Mexican film,” the actor adds. “It’s a universal story about how we connect to our family.”
“It also shows the importance of [basking] in the magic that there is in the world,” says Cuarón.
Cuarón flips the previously horrific chupacabra folklore on its back and creates what Bichir calls a “loving little creature.”
“That little Chupa is the cutest thing you’ve ever seen,” the actor adds.
Production went through many iterations of the Chupa and based the design on real animals while also “playing with something that is fantastical, which is a creature that’s kind of like a mammal but has wings and feathers — something we’ve never seen,” says Cuarón.