From John Powers' review on Fresh Air:
Quote
One man who has never stopped struggling is Patricio Guzman, the Chilean filmmaker who was imprisoned during the U.S.-backed coup that toppled Chile's elected president, Salvador Allende, and installed a military dictatorship that lasted the next 17 years. Guzman's documentaries have done as much as anything to keep alive the world's memory of what happened to his country that Sept. 11, 1973.
Of course, it's been 38 years since the coup, and Guzman is now 70; though he hasn't forgotten anything, he has moved beyond horrified anger. Guzman never made a more beautiful or profound movie than his new one, Nostalgia for the Light, an exquisitely shot essay on ultimate things time, space, memory and how creatures so small and frail as human beings find meaning in a gigantic cosmos.
It is too ironic that the place where astronomers still go to see the universe more clearly is also the place where so many political prisoners disappeared because so many humans, corporations and governments are not able to see or understand or tolerate things that don't fit their preconceived ideas.