agmtw logo
search
Chile 76 (2022)

Chile 76 (2022)

The personal is political in this quietly moving look at authoritarian Chile

7.2

Movie

Argentina, Chile
English, Spanish
Drama
2022
FEMALE DIRECTOR, MANUELA MARTELLI
Alejandro Goic, Aline Kuppenheim, Amalia Kassai
96 min

TLDR

This movie has more mirror scenes than a hall of mirrors has, well, mirrors, but I’m here for it—more angles of Aline Küppenheim's immaculate face, the better.

What it's about

As the wife of a doctor, Carmen (Aline Küppenheim) lives a life of comfort, alternating between her domestic duties as a grandmother and helping out at the local church, but all this is about to change when she’s asked to shelter a mysterious man in hiding.

The take

Chile 76 takes place three years after the dictator Augusto Pinochet took over the country and cracked down on dissenting groups and rebels. There was political strife and unnecessary violence, but almost none of this plays out explicitly in the film. Instead, we mostly follow Carmen, who seems to be going through a crisis of her own, albeit an internal one. She lives a well-to-do life as she decorates a new house and volunteers at the church, but there is a deep-seated melancholia about her, which is maybe why she’s so drawn to Elias (Nicolás Sepúlveda). She exits her comfort zone and aids in his covert exchanges across town, perhaps because she’s genuinely interested in Elias’ cause, but possibly because she sees it as a way out from the humdrum of her privileged life. The beauty of the film is that it melds the personal with the political in subtle and interesting ways, allowing us viewers to draw our own conclusions to the matter.

What stands out

Küppenheim is so captivating, her expressions so still yet moving, that it’s only by the movie’s end you realize how skewed, actually, the film’s point of view is. Thousands died at the hand of Pinochet, so it does seem odd to center a film that boldly claims to be about the national experience on an apolitical bourgeoise woman. To be fair, it does give the film a distinctly female gaze, and I admire how her growing paranoia is underlain with both personal and political troubles, but I wish the film mined Elias’ life a bit more and showed (not just told) us how he and his comrades lived in Chile in 1976.

Comments

Add a comment

Your name

Your comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

Fruitvale Station (2013)

Compassionate filmmaking reconstructing a 24-hour police brutality story – with a stunning lead by Michael B. Jordan

9.7

Nowhere (2023)

A riveting Spanish Netflix survival thriller brought to life in Anna Castillo’s performance

7.8

Open Your Eyes (1997)

The startlingly surreal Spanish psychothriller that inspired modern cult classic Vanilla Sky

8.0

Broadcast News (1987)

A romantic and bittersweet drama set in the hectic world of TV news

8.0

In the Mood for Love (2000)

A timeless, melancholic classic of modern Hong Kong cinema about loneliness and love

9.2

Mutt (2023)

A Sundance-awarded film that actually stands the test of time, a brave new addition to the trans cinema canon

8.3

Holy Spider (2022)

A timely and terrifying noir that takes on systemic abuse and corruption in Iran

8.0

Living (2022)

Simply told and profoundly moving, this parable covers nothing less than life itself

8.7

Return to Seoul (2022)

A stunning and subversive tale of a woman in search of her roots

9.5

Scoop (2024)

A gripping and illuminating dramatization of a landmark interview from the creator of The Crown

7.4

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.