Bombo Fica faces two realities: one of success and fame and the other of failures and misadventures.
A surreal Chilean road movie in which two wanderers come across an assortment of oddballs.
Niki and his friends are members of the marginalised underclass living on the outskirts of Santiago. During Chile's transition from dictatorship to democracy (1988-1990), they forge a path from drug- and drink-fuelled nihilism and petty crime into the world of market-driven illegality and Niki begins a seemingly predestined relationship with the middle-class "loca", Manuela. Memorable episodes and characters, quotable dialogue and a mix of earthy national portrait and surrealistic flourish make this one of the key Chilean films of the Nineties.
In the late 1980s, a politically neutral photographer in Pinochet's Chile is still struggling to come to terms with the "disappearance" of his activist brother in the Villa Grimaldi torture centre back in 1975.
A Chilean exile leaves his Swedish partner to return to Chile. There he meets his old love, Consuelo.
A Chilean returning to Santiago to find out what has happened to his native country while he has been away, discovers much about himself.
The extreme poverty produced by unbridled neoliberalism in Pinochet’s Chile is an allegory for the disappeared. Based on a play by Juan Radrigán.
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