Top of Page

The Battle of Chile

Released 1975
Runtime 96
Language Spanish
Director Patricio Guzman

What it’s about

The Chilean coup de’etat of 1973, which overthrew democratically elected President Salvador Allende and ushered into power a military regime headed by General Augusto Pinochet, shocked the world. Chilean documentary filmmaker Patricio Guzmn and his small crew (some of whom had never worked on a movie before) began shooting around the country a few months before the coup. The resulting three-part “Battle of Chile” recounts, in painstaking, expansive detail, how the forces opposed to Allende’s policies worked in a coordinated fashion to bring him down, and, after failing time and again, finally resorted to military violence.

Why we love it

Composed entirely of firsthand footage, Guzmán's “Battle of Chile” is that rare case where you can watch history as it was actually being made. Far from a dry exposé, this piece of truly epic cinema rocks with the force of a scripted political thriller, commanding your attention for its entire running time. Whatever you may think of the filmmaker's clearly left-leaning politics, there's no denying that “Battle of Chile” is a truly landmark documentary.

Salvador Allende, Augusto Pinochet Patricio Guzmn

Up Next


BECOME A MEMBER

Further explore our 3,300+ curated movie database with exclusive content and member perks.

Join now