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Cine Chileno Apr 2026
Then there is (2023), a revisionist Western shot in the breathtaking Tierra del Fuego. It looks like Terrence Malick, but hits like a hammer—revealing the genocide of the Selk’nam people. It’s a brutal reminder that Chile’s beauty has a violent history. Where to Start: Your Cine Chileno Watchlist If you have never seen a Chilean film before, don’t start with the experimental stuff. Start here: For the Political Junkie: No (2012) – Available on MUBI/Prime Funny, tense, and uses grainy 1980s VHS aesthetics to tell a true story of advertising winning against tyranny. For the Romantic: A Fantastic Woman (2017) – Available on Netflix/Hulu A devastatingly beautiful performance by Daniela Vega. For the Dark Comedy Fan: The Maid (2009) – Available on Kanopy A psychological drama about a live-in housekeeper who terrorizes the family she works for. It is claustrophobic, funny, and raw. For the Horror Fanatic: The Wolf House (2018) – Available on Shudder Watch it alone. In the dark. Do not blink. The Verdict Cine Chileno is not "easy" cinema. It is often slow, sad, and suffocating. But it is also triumphant. It is the art of a country that was told to forget, and refused.
(2018) is unlike anything you have ever seen. It is a stop-motion horror film set inside a German colony in southern Chile. The walls move. The paint peels. A girl turns into a table. It is genuinely terrifying, not because of jumpscares, but because of its relentless, artistic dread. cine chileno
Whether it’s a drag queen singing in a neon-lit Santiago club or a cowboy slaughtering indigenous tribes in Patagonia, Chilean films have a singular texture: Resilience. Then there is (2023), a revisionist Western shot
When most people think of Latin American cinema, their minds jump immediately to Mexico’s Golden Age, Argentina’s Nuevo Cine, or Brazil’s Cinema Novo . But tucked between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes Mountains lies a film industry that has, over the last two decades, become one of the most audacious and emotionally devastating forces in world cinema. Where to Start: Your Cine Chileno Watchlist If
Lelio’s (2017) made history as the first Chilean film to win the Oscar for Best International Feature. It follows Marina, a transgender waitress and nightclub singer, grieving the death of her older lover. The film is a masterclass in empathy. It doesn’t just ask you to feel sorry for Marina; it makes you feel her rage, her resilience, and her surreal, beautiful dreams. It changed the global conversation about trans representation overnight. The Surreal and the Horror If you think Chilean cinema is all political dramas, think again. The country has a wild, experimental streak.