Tsu'pa
David Petersen, a quiet and reserved man, is driving alone through the remote mountain roads of the Colorado Rockies during a severe winter storm. Seeking shelter from the worsening weather, he stops…

Tsu'pa
David Petersen, a quiet and reserved man, is driving alone through the remote mountain roads of the Colorado Rockies during a severe winter storm. Seeking shelter from the worsening weather, he stops at a small roadside diner. Inside, David notices tension between Ana, a waitress, and her aggressive ex-husband, Vincent. Vincent's behavior escalates into intimidation and verbal violence. When the situation threatens to turn physical, David intervenes, creating a distraction that allows Ana to remove herself from the immediate danger. David does not leave the diner with Ana; after the confrontation subsides, he resumes his journey alone. As David drives deeper into the storm, visibility deteriorates and the icy road conditions become increasingly dangerous. He loses control of his vehicle and crashes into a steep ravine. The car is severely damaged, and David suffers a serious leg injury that leaves him immobilized inside the wreck. With no phone signal, limited supplies, and temperatures rapidly dropping, David realizes he is trapped and unlikely to receive help before succumbing to the cold. As night falls, David struggles to stay conscious while fighting pain, blood loss, and hypothermia. His isolation intensifies as he begins to hear movement outside the vehicle. At first assuming it is wildlife, David soon becomes aware of a large predatory creature stalking the ravine. The animal does not attack immediately; instead, it circles the car, testing David's endurance and forcing him into a prolonged psychological battle as much as a physical one. In parallel, Ana's strolling unfolds separately. After the diner incident, she continues to be pursued and threatened by Vincent, who refuses to let go of his control over her. As Ana attempts to escape Vincent during the storm, she becomes increasingly aware that the wilderness itself poses an additional danger. Her journey through the snow is marked by fear, exhaustion, and the realization that something unseen may also be tracking her movements. The film intercourse between David's desperate fight for survival in the ravine and Ana's escalating attempts to evade Vincent and the surrounding dangers. David's condition worsens as the creature grows bolder, scratching and pushing against the vehicle, waiting for weakness. Memories, regret, and flashes of his past surface as his physical strength fades. Eventually, the separate threads converge near the crash site, where human violence and natural predating collide. A final confrontation forces the characters to confront the true nature of survival - revealing that the greatest threat is not only the merciless cold or the predator in the dark, but also the cruelty and desperation of human behavior when stripped of safety and control.

Tsu'pa
Comedy,Drama
Film Details
David Petersen, a quiet and reserved man, is driving alone through the remote mountain roads of the Colorado Rockies during a severe winter storm. Seeking shelter from the worsening weather, he stops at a small roadside diner. Inside, David notices tension between Ana, a waitress, and her aggressive ex-husband, Vincent.
Vincent's behavior escalates into intimidation and verbal violence. When the situation threatens to turn physical, David intervenes, creating a distraction that allows Ana to remove herself from the immediate danger. David does not leave the diner with Ana; after the confrontation subsides, he resumes his journey alone.
As David drives deeper into the storm, visibility deteriorates and the icy road conditions become increasingly dangerous. He loses control of his vehicle and crashes into a steep ravine. The car is severely damaged, and David suffers a serious leg injury that leaves him immobilized inside the wreck.
With no phone signal, limited supplies, and temperatures rapidly dropping, David realizes he is trapped and unlikely to receive help before succumbing to the cold. As night falls, David struggles to stay conscious while fighting pain, blood loss, and hypothermia. His isolation intensifies as he begins to hear movement outside the vehicle.
At first assuming it is wildlife, David soon becomes aware of a large predatory creature stalking the ravine. The animal does not attack immediately; instead, it circles the car, testing David's endurance and forcing him into a prolonged psychological battle as much as a physical one. In parallel, Ana's strolling unfolds separately.
After the diner incident, she continues to be pursued and threatened by Vincent, who refuses to let go of his control over her. As Ana attempts to escape Vincent during the storm, she becomes increasingly aware that the wilderness itself poses an additional danger. Her journey through the snow is marked by fear, exhaustion, and the realization that something unseen may also be tracking her movements.
The film intercourse between David's desperate fight for survival in the ravine and Ana's escalating attempts to evade Vincent and the surrounding dangers. David's condition worsens as the creature grows bolder, scratching and pushing against the vehicle, waiting for weakness. Memories, regret, and flashes of his past surface as his physical strength fades.
Eventually, the separate threads converge near the crash site, where human violence and natural predating collide. A final confrontation forces the characters to confront the true nature of survival - revealing that the greatest threat is not only the merciless cold or the predator in the dark, but also the cruelty and desperation of human behavior when stripped of safety and control..