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Reuters
Reuters
Entertainment
By Lucila Sigal

Argentine documentary about junta trial set for Berlin bow

FILE PHOTO: Director Ulises de la Orden poses for a picture at the state entity CEAMSE that deals with waste management for the city and province of Buenos Aires, in the neighborhood of Jose Leon Suarez, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina July 22, 2019. Picture taken July 22, 2019. REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian/File Photo

An Argentine documentary based on hundreds of hours of audiovisual recordings of a seminal 1985 trial of leaders of the country's bloody military junta will make its international debut on Sunday at the Berlin Film Festival.

The release of "The Trial" coincides with the 40th anniversary of the return of democracy in Argentina, following the 1976-1983 dictatorship, which left up to 30,000 people dead or missing, according to human rights organizations.

FILE PHOTO: The Berlinale logo is pictured at the venue entrance of the 'Berlinale Palast' for the upcoming Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin, Germany, February 10, 2023. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/File Photo

The trial was the only time a democratic government has launched a large-scale civil judicial assault on former dictatorial rulers. The case proved a watershed for Argentina.

"There are very few or perhaps no societies that have done a justice process like the one that Argentina did," said director Ulises De la Orden, who painstaking went through 500 hours of raw footage to create a nearly three-hour documentary.

"It was also immediately after (the end of the dictatorship), that's the most interesting thing. Those commanders, those dictators still had influence."

The 51-year-old director told Reuters he hopes that the documentary will bring history closer to younger generations and inspire other judicial processes.

"I am not sure that our youth know a lot about what happened to us in the 70s," he said after a screening of the film in Buenos Aires attended by judges from the case and the sole surviving prosecutor.

Luis Moreno Ocampo, then assistant prosecutor who later became the chief prosecutor at the International Criminal Court, says the documentary carries a powerful message.

"I think it is super important a film that shows us the difference between treating people as citizens, including commanders who committed crimes, giving them rights and respecting their rights," Moreno Ocampo said.

"And contrasting it with what they did, treating suspects or people they didn't like by torturing and killing them."

The film is the second to cover the subject in recent months, following the release of the feature film "Argentina, 1985", which is nominated at the Oscars for best international film after winning a Golden Globe award last month.

(Reporting by Lucila Sigal, Writing by Isabel Woodford; Edited by Nicolas Misculin and Aurora Ellis)

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