Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Into the high mountains
MARIA DUARTE recommends a powerful documentary about the crimes of Pinochet’s Chile, and the contemplative power of the country’s snow-covered peaks
The Cordillera of Dreams

The Cordillera of Dreams (12A)
Directed by Patricio Guzman

CHILEAN filmmaker Patricio Guzman, who left Chile almost 50 years ago following Pinochet’s military coup d’etat, continues his examination of his country’s history and soul — this time through the mountain range that surrounds Santiago, his birthplace.

Said “cordillera” loom majestic and proud; a witness, according to Guzman (Battle of Chile), to events under Pinochet’s dictatorship that he believes were hidden from the country’s citizens.

The sweeping shots of the vast ridges are peaceful and calming, providing a stark contrast to the film footage of protesters, both men and women, being viciously manhandled and beaten up by the military and the police before being forcibly arrested and removed.

This film is the last of a trilogy that includes Nostalgia for the Light and The Pearl Button, in which Guzman explored the north and south of his homeland.

This, though, is a haunting documentary of two halves.

The first examines the snow-covered cordillera, whose gorgeous aerial vistas are accompanied by Guzman’s reflective narration as he contemplates his life as an exile and his conflicted relationship with his country, while pondering his theory on how these mountains take you back in time the deeper you explore them.

The second half of the film pays homage to cameraman Pablo Salas, who stayed in Chile following the Pinochet coup to capture protests and oppression on camera — after 37 years of non-stop filming, he has an extensive film archive.

Yet he states: “We only captured 5 per cent of the atrocities the dictatorship carried out. It tortured, killed, drove people into exile. It used intimidation. None of that was filmed.

”What he did shoot, though, is extremely powerful and damning and a historical account of what he witnessed. It is both disturbing and heartbreaking and a tribute to his fearlessness and bravery in not thinking about his own safety in order to capture the truth and reality of what was transpiring.

As Guzman says: “Thanks to Pablo’s work, they can’t erase history.”
Guzman also explores the lasting economic remnants of the Pinochet regime: an economic system that favours the rich and extorts the poor.

The Cordillera of Dreams is a fascinating documentary: contemplative and dreamlike; passionate and hard-hitting. It shows how, after spending almost 50 years making films about his country, Guzman still has a lot more to say.

MD

In cinemas

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
fotw
Film of the week / 5 June 2025
5 June 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends an exposure of the state violence used against pro-Palestine protests in the US

round up
Cinema / 29 May 2025
29 May 2025

The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Along Came Love, The Ballad of Wallis Island, The Ritual, and Karate Kid: Legends

fotw
Film of the Week / 29 May 2025
29 May 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends the powerful dramatisation of the true story of a husband and wife made homeless

IMPECCABLE: Benicio Del Toro as  Zsa-zsa Korda and Mia Threapleton as his daughter Liesl in The Phoenician Scheme
Film of the week / 22 May 2025
22 May 2025

MARIA DUARTE is in two minds about a peculiar latest offering from Wes Anderson

Similar stories
TRUE STORY: Aram Sabbah and Mahmoud Bakri in Mahdi Fleifel's
Film of the Week: / 13 February 2025
13 February 2025
MARIA DUARTE recommends a tense thriller that uses Palestinian characters to explore the predicament of migrants in Europe
Literature / 10 February 2025
10 February 2025
An outstanding novel by Chilean writer and activist Pedro Lemebel, a poetry pamphlet by Venezuelan Natasha Tiniacos, and a children’s book of haikus singing the beauty of Cuba
ANTICOLONIALIST IMPROVISATION: Ambroise Boimbo, a Congolese
Film of the Week: / 14 November 2024
14 November 2024
MARIA DUARTE recommends an exploration of the way famous black jazz musicians were used as camouflage in the US plot to assassinate Lumumba
(L) Chilean academic and photographer Luis Bustamante; (R) C
Exhibition Review / 11 July 2024
11 July 2024
Co-curator TOM WHITE introduces a father-and-son exhibition of photography documenting the experience and political engagement of Chilean exiles