Parents' Guide to

ReMastered: Massacre at the Stadium

Movie NR 2019 64 minutes
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Common Sense Media Review

Brian Costello By Brian Costello , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 14+

Docu about slain folk singer has violence, profanity.

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This is an excellent documentary, especially because the story of Victor Jara -- his music, legacy, and impact for future generations -- needs to be known and understood. But it's more than that. ReMastered: Massacre at the Stadium conveys so much information and context in such a short amount of time, while also presenting the perspectives of those who took part, from Jara's wife, Joan, who has spent decades searching for those responsible for the death of her husband, to CIA agents operating in Chile at the time at the behest of Henry Kissinger, to the Chilean military veterans, who emerged out of poverty, were drafted, and were sent to participate in the atrocities and human rights abuses perpetrated by the Pinochet regime.

It's a deeply moving documentary of a horrific time, but it's also a documentary that shows the power of music to bring positive change in the world. Every year in Santiago, musicians take part in the Festival of 1,000 Guitars for Victor Jara and play his song "The Right to Live in Peace." The stadium where Jara was tortured and killed has been renamed Victor Jara Stadium. These hopeful and beautiful moments serve to underscore that this story is so much more than a story of Cold War moral ambiguity and brutal military oppression. It is, ultimately, a testament to the truth in the Martin Luther King Jr. quote "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice."

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