The Vampires of Poverty

It opens with a scene of the filmmakers giving stage direction to a homeless man begging in front of a church.

In scenes that follow, the filmmakers are depicted shoving cameras into the faces of an indigent child and an elderly lady, paying young boys to take off their clothes and swim in a dirty fountain, stalking a mentally ill women across a street, asking a taxi driver where they can find crazy people and prostitutes, filming a street performer as he washes his face with shards of broken glass, and rehearsing scenes with paid actors.

At one point, a homeless person whose home has been invaded by the filmmakers interrupts the filming and declares: "Bloodsucking vampires!

In the end, the man who interrupted the production is interviewed and states that his favorite part of the film is the satire.

The film is a mockumentary addressing the topic of "misery porn" or what Colombian critics in the 1970s called "pornomiseria", the practice of making a spectacle out of poverty.