Premiered in 1973 writer/director Miguel Littin's Chilean film is a historical political drama set in rural Chile in the early 1930s where a group of the wandering, landless poor attempt to establish a communal community in a valley in Palmilla. But events conspire against them. Described as 'An epic filmed ballad from Chile combining history and myth, allegory and revolution, spectacle and poetry', Littin's political polemic is about the burning land issue and landlordism (something we're still struggling with in the 21st century!), and succeeds in being realist, impressionistic, symbolic, evocative, occasionally surrealistic, and has a striking, tragic climactic battle sequence. Featuring a Holy Mother, a red plane, burning crosses, and songs, it's about events which sadly were not the last false dawn for Chile (another one was just about to be realised), and as a film it maybe only of marginal interest to some audiences.