The Battle of Chile
In the radical seventies as a student in America I saw many documentaries
that began to push me in the direction of thinking of filmmaking as a viable
and vital form of action and protest but the one film that remains etched in
my mind is Patricio Guzman's “The Battle of Chile”.
Chile’s President Salvador Allende was already our ideal. I was grappling
with the desire to convert my Marxist friends to value democratic, non-violent
means, while at the same time trying to convince my Gandhian friends that mere
non-violence without class analysis could not bring economic and social justice.
Here was Allende, a Marxist who came to power not through a bloody revolution
but through elections. When a CIA sponsored military coup killed Allende in
1973 and massacred thousands of workers and bright young Chileans who worked
amongst the people, it was a great blow to the cause of democratic socialism
and to me personally. Guzman's epic documentary captured both the glory and
challenge of the Allende years but also underlined the proportions of the tragedy
that befell the world after his overthrow and murder on September 11, 1973.
What I recall creating the greatest impact on me was not the most dramatic
footage in the film – the footage of an Argentinian cameraman who had
continued to shoot even as the military fired directly at him, thereby filming
his own death – nor the footage of the final bombing of the Moneda building
in which Allende died – it was the painstaking record of daily events
in the lives of ordinary citizens of Chile as the crisis created by the CIA
and the Chilean oligarchy moved towards its tragic finale.
On seeing the film again a quarter of a century later one is struck by details
rather than by the broad strokes. The camerapersons of “The Battle of
Chile” paid the highest price for their courage and their ability to
go anywhere and everywhere. Apart from the Argentinian Leonardo Henrickson
who died while filming, the main cinematographer of the film, Jorge Muller,
was tortured and killed by the brutal regime of General Augusto Pinochet in
the aftermath of the coup that overthrew Allende. Guzman’s cameras are
everywhere at once, talking with the right wing urban elite, mingling with
workers in their homes and factories, observing hypocritical politicians in
Parliament, marching with workers as the Opposition opened fire from overhead
balconies, attending the funeral procession of a worker who was killed in the
firing, dissecting the cold, smiling exteriors of a military leadership already
controlled from Washington, already involved in the pre-emptive murder of a
colleague whom they suspect may remain faithful to the elected government on
the day of the great betrayal.
The narrative begins to take on the ominous tone of a prophecy foretold as
we witness the machinations of a right-wing determined to seize power by any
means necessary, shifting seamlessly from unshakeable faith in the democratic
process (as long as it brings victory) to making unlikely alliances with striking
workers, to an open embrace of fascism.
With the hindsight of history we know the tragedy that lies in wait, but much
of the film remains suffused with the hope and romance of a revolution in the
making, a revolution that could bring justice without spilling blood, without
sacrificing democracy. One can feel this romance coursing through the veins
of the film crew as it records minute discussions held in factories and meeting
halls where every shade of the working class political spectrum expresses itself
and gears up for the days to come. Everyone can sense that a confrontation
is almost inevitable. Many express the view that the legally elected government
should begin to arm the workers in self-defence. But Allende remains an idealist
to the end, either convinced that key sections of the State will remain loyal
and respect the Constitution, or determined that come what may, he will not
use extra-legal means to protect himself and his government.
One danger in evaluating a film of this significance is that its content almost
precludes analysis of its aesthetic. To correct this tendency, in the 70’s
Julio Garcia Espinoza launched a thesis of “Imperfect Cinema” applauding
the “look and feel” of a cinema that bore the marks of the struggles
it was depicting. So black and white, grainy, scratched and fast moving hand-held
footage came to be a recognized cinematic expression. “The Battle of
Chile” while at times epitomizing the best values of such “imperfection” goes
far beyond self-conscious radicalism and its poetry stems from an unerring
faith in the importance of the ordinary as it interweaves with the extra-ordinary.
Like that masterpiece of historical reconstruction, Gilo Pontecorvo’s “The
Battle of Algiers” a film it was probably named after, “The Battle
of Chile” takes us chapter by inexorable chapter to its denouement but
with a distinction that sets it apart. It is not a fictional recreation but
a living record of a people as they were in a world we may never see again
and revives the memory of a hope we are fortunate to be able to feel again.
Anand Patwardhan
Dox Magazine, August 2003