Los Angeles Times

FILMS WON’T LET CHILE FORGET

The filmmaker’s work capturing the turmoil of his native land is being made available online and on DVD.

- By Sheri Linden calendar@latimes.com

Patricio Guzmán, a matchless artist in the realm of nonfiction film, hasn’t lived in his native Chile since 1973. And yet for more than 40 years his homeland has remained his dearest and most charged subject.

In his tireless stand on behalf of memory and against forgetting, Chile is the terrain he excavates and whose ghosts he exhumes, in films that range from the monumental three-part “Battle of Chile” through “The Pearl Button,” an exploratio­n of the nation’s treatment of its indigenous people, which received the screenwrit­ing prize at this year’s Berlin film festival.

When Guzmán says, in a new documentar­y about his work, that Chile is “a country that rests upon a wound,” he’s referring not just to the geologic plates that could tear it asunder but also to the violent 1973 coup that ended what he calls the “radiant dream” of President Salvador Allende’s leftist reforms and launched the murderous dictatorsh­ip of Augusto Pinochet.

The documentar­y portrait of Guzmán, French director Boris Nicot’s “Filming Obstinatel­y,” has never screened in the States but is included in a DVD box set from Icarus Films that will be released Tuesday. It collects a quintet of Guzmán’s most influentia­l and potent works, spanning the 35 years from the first installmen­t of “Battle” through 2010’s “Nostalgia for the Light,” a film that’s as piercingly political as any documentar­y that Guzmán has directed and at the same time possesses a rare level of lyricism. “Five Films by Patricio Guzmán” will also be available on video-on-demand, with Icarus bringing “The Battle of Chile” online for the first time.

Guzmán, 74, completed that cinematic collection in self-imposed exile and subtitled it “The Struggle of an Unarmed People.” Each stand-alone section focuses on a different aspect of the devastaing events of 1973. “Part One: Insurrecti­on of the Bourgeoisi­e” tracks the mobilizati­on against Allende by the country’s right wing, bolstered by the CIA. “The Coup d’État” captures the escalating polarizati­on of the classes as the nation braces for the seemingly inevitable overthrow of the democratic­ally elected government.

The final film, “The Power of the People,” is especially poignant in the hopeful resilience it depicts. The filmmaker zeros in on the industrial networks organized by pro-Allende workers who were determined to counteract the destabiliz­ing maneuvers of the profession­al classes and U.S. government. As Guzmán’s 2004 “Salvador Allende” makes clear, U.S. leaders had been trying to discredit the Chilean politician well before his successful 1970 presidenti­al bid.

The director and his intrepid cameraman, Jorge Müller Silva, filmed vigorously during what turned out to be the final year of Allende’s presidency and life. Guzmán had returned to Santiago from film school in Madrid when he found the country energized by revolution­ary optimism and then convulsed by counterrev­olution. “We filmed the class struggle as if it were a landscape,” he tells Nicot. “The Battle of Chile” is dedicated to the memory of Müller Silva, who became one of Chile’s countless “disappeare­d” citizens.

A second cameraman haunts “Battle”: Leonardo Henrichsen, an Argentine working for Swedish television whose chilling footage of his own murder closes “Part One” and opens “Part Two.” Covering a failed coup attempt six weeks before Allende’s overthrow, the 33-year-old recorded an insurgent military regiment shooting their guns at him, over his protests that he was a journalist. An army officer proceeded to destroy the photograph­ic evidence, not realizing that Henrichsen’s camera contained a backup chamber.

Guzmán — who fled the country after two weeks of imprisonme­nt in the first days of the coup and now lives in France — wasn’t the first to make public those horrifying final images, but he used them to stirring effect.

Unf linching gaze

The refusal to be cowed or look away is a defining characteri­stic of his work, and the need to remember is the explicit subject of two films in the Icarus collection: “Nostalgia for the Light” and the hourlong 1997 documentar­y “Chile, Obstinate Memory.” For the latter, a heart-rending exploratio­n of the way history gets rewritten, the filmmaker returned to his home country, where “Battle of Chile” had never been theatrical­ly screened. He planned to show the documentar­y to small groups, in particular students who weren’t alive during the coup.

As Guzmán tells Nicot, more than 30 schools refused to screen “Battle,” their administra­tors citing the need to focus on the positive. The past, in their view, is an obstacle to education. Closely observing those students whose schools did agree to show the film, “Obstinate Memory” captures a wide range of reactions, many of them deeply emotional. Most haunting are the responses of those who were in Chile on Sept. 11, 1973, the day the presidenti­al palace was bombed by the Chilean air force. A young man weeps to recall that, as Allende was under siege and the junta was sweeping up its perceived enemies, he rejoiced to learn that school was canceled. An elderly woman doesn’t recognize herself in footage from the film, as though the knowledge that her husband, son, brother, son-in-law and nephew were among the disappeare­d is all she can bear to recall. And then there’s Allende’s widow, Hortensia Bussi, with her quiet indignatio­n and her stinging observatio­n that wanting to forget is a matter of “self-defense.”

In the 2001 feature “The Pinochet Case,” a woman who lost her sons and her house during the coup tells Guzmán that her husband “died of sadness.” Chroniclin­g the back-and-forth as Spanish lawyers attempted to bring Pinochet (who died in 2006) to justice, the film incorporat­es harrowing testimony from women who survived imprisonme­nt and torture. “My revenge is just staying alive,” one survivor says.

Guzmán is at the side of a forensic anthropolo­gist as she examines charred bone fragments from mass graves in the desert of northern Chile, where Pinochet turned the abandoned mine Chacabuco into a concentrat­ion camp. No comment is necessary when he includes a clip of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher telling the dictator, “You brought democracy to Chile.”

A decade after “The Pinochet Case,” Guzmán returned to Chile’s Atacama Desert for “Nostalgia for the Light,” which took top honors at the Internatio­nal Documentar­y Assn.’s 2011 awards. A work of poetic potency, it unforgetta­bly connects the heaven-gazing astronomer­s who flock to the region, and the endlessly grieving women who are always looking downward, sifting through the sand for the remains of loved ones murdered by the Pinochet regime.

Both groups are looking for evidence of the past. Around them, not just a nation but a world is often eager to forget. Guzmán, who fervently believes in the “gravitatio­nal force” of memory, finds it in every direction. He builds constellat­ions from it, uncovering the charred and brilliant pieces that tell us where we’ve been.

 ?? Icarus Films ??
Icarus Films
 ?? Icarus Films ?? “NOSTALGIA” links astronomer­s in Atacama Desert with grieving women sifting for loved ones’ remains.
Icarus Films “NOSTALGIA” links astronomer­s in Atacama Desert with grieving women sifting for loved ones’ remains.
 ?? Icarus Films ?? PATRICIO GUZMÁN, filming, is tireless in his stand on behalf of memory and against forgetting the bloody history of Chile.
Icarus Films PATRICIO GUZMÁN, filming, is tireless in his stand on behalf of memory and against forgetting the bloody history of Chile.
 ??  ?? CHILEAN PRESIDENT Salvador Allende delivers a speech before the 1973 coup that led to his death and installed Gen. Augusto Pinochet.
CHILEAN PRESIDENT Salvador Allende delivers a speech before the 1973 coup that led to his death and installed Gen. Augusto Pinochet.

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