Along the way, Guzman interviews artists, writers, and documentarians, collecting their conflicted feelings towards the Cordillera and its relationship to Chilean national identity and history. The film's prominent moral voice is Pablo Salas, a filmmaker and archivist who has worked since the 1980s to document acts of political resistance and state violence.
Looking at the past and future, Guzman's work rescues Chile from historical amnesia. While the Cordillera forms an omnipresent backdrop to the Chilean landscape, much of it is privately owned and inaccessible mirror the country's severe economic inequality. Unflinching in its presentation of today's Chile, The Cordillera of Dreams moves beyond despair and looks towards the possibilities of political change.
Related Subjects
Documentary