The Cordillera of Dreams Reviews
The mountain range both separates and protects the country from the rest of the world, says Guzmán; the country’s topography is an extended metaphor for its rocky political realities.
| Original Score: 3/5 | Oct 10, 2022
It’s a thoughtful essay on what remains unsaid in the South American state and how the spectre of the past impacts on the present.
| Oct 5, 2022
This affecting lithograph of Chile culminates in the intersection of personal, political and poetic.
| Original Score: 4/5 | Oct 4, 2022
This is rich and valuable testament to Chilean courage.
| Original Score: 4/5 | Oct 4, 2022
Anyone that accuses Guzmán of being rambling in Cordillera is not really paying attention to the nature of his lifelong filmmaking project.
| Sep 19, 2022
In this final chapter, Guzman is more autobiographical and also, more pessimistic. [Full review in Spanish]
| Jun 21, 2022
The mountain range is strength and energy, loneliness and madness, life and death at the same time. [Full review in Spanish]
| Original Score: 10/10 | Dec 15, 2021
Patricio Guzmán launches his drone over the Ande... like a primal monster that looks indifferently at the story of a country that is also that part of a globalized world avant la lettre. [Full review in Spanish]
| Original Score: 3.5/5 | Dec 14, 2021
Guzmán evokes a poetic sense of imposing mysteries and unrepairable fissures, which spread through him - and economically unbalanced Chilean culture - like the solemn valleys that course between the Andes' peaks.
| Jan 27, 2021
The Cordillera of Dreams is the last in Guzmán's latest documentary trilogy on his home country. Despite the utopia of the Allende years, when he returns to Santiago he does not find the beach under the paving stones...
| Jan 9, 2021
something quite extraordinary-a poetic political-historical documentary that finds a sublime balance between the horrors of human atrocity, the potential for redemption and growth, and the enormity of the world in which it all takes place
| Original Score: 3.5/4 | Oct 16, 2020
[Patricio] Guzmán has an almost poetic way of demonstrating the rot and neglect among the beauty of the Andes.
| Jul 14, 2020
We may not always know where Guzmán will end up, but what keeps the film from ever seeming discombobulated is certain themes repeat: specifically, how events can be powerful enough to leave impressions that are impossible to erase.
| Original Score: 5/5 | May 30, 2020
With Cordillera of Dreams, Documentarian Patricio Guzmán completes his trilogy contrasting the beauty of Chile's landscapes with the horror of its recent political history by focusing on the deceptively unchanging Andes cordillera.
| Feb 29, 2020
If time seems to pass more slowly in Chile, according to Guzmán, it is because vital questions have lost none of their relevance.
| Feb 27, 2020
[Guzman]is cinema's principal documenter of Chile's turbulent recent history and its lasting effects on contemporary society...
| Original Score: B+ | Feb 23, 2020
To turn the camera on such suffering is a vital, sometimes heroic act. To turn the camera on rocks and glaciers may be a less intuitive form of resistance, but one that Guzmán invests with its own powerful meaning.
| Feb 20, 2020
[The Cordillera of Dreams] contains blunt talk and unvarnished footage of the brutal facts of modern Chilean history [that] makes for a compelling, revelatory essay.
| Feb 19, 2020
2010's Nostalgia for the Light looked at the desert; 2015's The Pearl Button explored the ocean. Now we come to the mountain.
| Feb 12, 2020
"The Cordillera of Dreams" is a beautiful film about nightmares that have yet to end.
| Feb 11, 2020