More than 40 years have passed since a military coup in Chile deposed the democratically elected government of President Salvador Allende. The death of Allende and the years of military dictatorship that followed have left deep scars in both the country and in Allende's immediate family. In BEYOND MY GRANDFATHER ALLENDE (ALLENDE MI ABUELO ALLENDE), his granddaughter Marcia Tambutti Allende goes in search of Salvador Allende the man.
She attempts to reconstruct the past through informal interviews with her family, quickly discovering that they don't talk about "Chico," as he was affectionately known. Memories of him have been buried deep and seem too painful to drag up. Nevertheless, the filmmaker's aged grandmother slowly but surely becomes accustomed to her compassionate but sharp interviewing style and starts to talk more about Allende, her marriage and her role as the president's wife. Other members of the family, many of whom never knew Allende personally, also start to talk.
Marcia goes in search of family photos and videos, and as a result we get to know the kind of man her grandfather was. Winner of Best Documentary at the 2017 Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Film Festival, the film also provides a thorough impression of the complex political situation of the Allende family over the past 40 years.
"Serves as a unique opportunity for contemporary Chileans-and outsiders, too-to rediscover the deposed leader"—Variety
"Extraordinary... The film is an invitation to love for those whose families are complex, and for those whose lives are implicated in world history."—Michael D. Kennedy, Professor of Sociology and International and Public Affairs, Brown University
"The key player is her grandmother, Hortensia ("Tencha")… Frail but lucid and still very elegant, [she] acknowledges her love for her late husband, her suffering at his affairs with other women and her unconditional support for his political ambitions ... One can understand how difficult it is to open old wounds, but most viewers will agree the director is right to insist on coaxing out the family truth, before it is too late to put the tale together."—The Hollywood Reporter
"In this treasure hunt, Marcia Tambutti Allende creates a valuable historical testimony, but especially a sensitive and discreet family portrait. A fascinating and intimate documentary."—Trois Couleurs
"After decades of silence, Marcia draws an honest portrait without grandiloquence, taking into account the complexity, irreparable losses and the role of memory in three generations of an injured family."—France Inter
Best Documentary, Golden Eye Prize, Cannes Film Festival 2015
Best Film, Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Film Festival 2017
Cine Las Americas Film Festival 2016
International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) 2015
London Human Rights Film Festival 2015