Interviews with Pinochet's victims put a human face on the systematic torture that existed under his rule.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
It's hard to walk away unaffected from this heartfelt, well-researched, feature-length documentary.
New York Daily News by Jack Mathews
The film is at its most compelling when the witnesses are telling their stories, and at its least in covering Pinochet's circuitous legal route to Britain's House of Lords.
Chilean filmmaker Patricio Guzman's powerful and sometimes triumphant documentary is not only an excellent overview of the affair, but serves as the perfect finale to his monumental trilogy about the coup and its aftermath, which began with "The Battle of Chile" (1978).
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
Because stateside newspapers aren't enough, "The Battle of Chile" (possibly the most riveting and vital historical document ever put on celluloid) should be a prerequisite to Guzmán's new doc, The Pinochet Case.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by Peter Rainer
The Pinochet Case is a searing album of remembrance from those who, having survived, suffered most.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
Eloquent, meticulously structured documentary -- Sober political and legal analysis alternates with grim first-hand accounts of torture and murder in a film that has the structure of a choral symphony that swells to a bittersweet finale.
A riveting documentary.