91 minutos
The rejection of the project for a new, more socially just constitution by the Chilean people in 2022 has reignited the conflicts that have plagued the country for five decades. On September 11, 1973, in a bloody military coup, General Pinochet ended the socialist revolution launched by President Salvador Allende, legitimately elected in a democratic election. The subsequent dictatorial regime with fascist features brought great violence and terror to the Chilean people. The accompanying neo-liberal economic system, which made the country one of the richest in the region, led to an ever-widening social gap in society, which in turn fell into a kind of passivity. In 2019, long after the dictator was voted out of office and the democratization that followed, a new social movement is shaking the prevailing order. From Allende's socialism to Pinochet's fascism, this historical fresco in documentary form returns to the origins of the rupture.
Éric Caravaca
Self - Narrator (voice)
Luz Acre
Self - Interviewee
Michelle Bachelet
Self - Interviewee
Alberto Cardemil
Self - Interviewee
Enrique Correa
Self - Interviewee
Mario Desbordes
Self - Interviewee
Gaspar Dominguez
Self - Interviewee
Oscar Guillermo Garretón
Self - Interviewee
Giovanna Grandón
Self - Interviewee
Fernando Guzmán
Self - Interviewee
Giorgio Jackson
Self - Interviewee
Milton Juica
Self - Interviewee
Natividad Llanquileo
Self - Interviewee
Claudina Nuñez
Self - Interviewee
Carlos Ominami
Self - Interviewee
Pedro Felipe Ramirez
Self - Interviewee
Anouk Adrien
Self - Additional Voice
Damien Cochereau
Self - Additional Voice
Clémentine Domptail
Self - Additional Voice
Ali Guentas
Self - Additional Voice
Arnauld Le Ridant
Self - Additional Voice
Cédric Zimmerlin
Self - Additional Voice