The Pearl Button (El botón de nácar) (2015)

UNKNOWN
Various
Movie Reviews89%
NR
2015, Documentary, 1h 22m
RT Critics’ Score: 94% (UNBIASED)
RT Audience Score: 82%
Awards & Nominations: 11 wins & 12 nominations

 

Critics Consensus

Deliberately paced yet hypnotically absorbing, The Pearl Button offers a poetic look at the wonders of the natural world — and humanity’s place among them.
 

Audience Consensus

The Pearl Button is like a Malick film on steroids, with stunning visuals and a haunting exploration of Chile’s past. It’s like taking a trip through time and space, with Patricio Guzmán as your guide. But be warned, this documentary is not for the faint of heart – it will leave you feeling unsettled and haunted by the unimaginable horrors of history. So buckle up and prepare for a wild ride through the beauty and darkness of Chilean Patagonia.
 
Movie Trailer

Movie Info

Storyline

Filmmaker Patricio Guzmán explores the connection between Patagonian waterways and genocide in the haunting and poetic documentary, The Pearl Button.

 
Production Company(ies)
AGBO Hotdog Hands Ley Line Entertainment,
 
Distributor
Kino Lorber
 
Release Type
Streaming, Theatrical, Theatrical (Limited)
 
Filming Location(s)
Patagonia, Chile
 
MPAA / Certificate
Not Rated
 
Year of Release
2015
 

Technical Specs
  • Color:
    Color
  • Sound mix:
    Dolby
  • Aspect ratio:
    1.85 : 1
  • Runtime:
    1h 22m
  • Language(s):
    Spanish
  • Country of origin:
    Chile, France, Germany, Mexico, Switzerland
  • Release date:
    Release Date (Theaters): Oct 23, 2015 Limited
    Release Date (Streaming): Jan 1, 2017

 
Genre(s)
Documentary
 
Keyword(s)
documentary, Patagonian waterways, genocide, Patricio Guzmán, Renate Sachse, written by Patricio Guzmán, directed by Patricio Guzmán, reviewed by Bilge Ebiri, Nigel Andrews, Kate Taylor, Mark Kermode, Kate Muir, Geoffrey Macnab, Mattie Lucas, Nick Evan-Cook, Matthew Anderson, Max Nelson, Mary Palmer, Ernesto Diezmartinez, starring Patricio Guzmán, Raúl Zurita, produced by Renate Sachse, Kino Lorber, Spanish, 2015, 1h 22m, box office gross $39.6K, audience score 82%, Tomatometer 94%, documentary film, Chilean Patagonia, indigenous people, Pinochet regime, water landscapes, mystical understanding, dark historical stories, poetic, hypnotically absorbing, natural world, humanity’s place among them, geology, anthropology, tribes, tyrants, haunting, visual poetry, Malickian imagery, stunning scenery, distant and recent past, tough, prickly, matter-of-factness
 

Box Office Details

Worldwide gross: $119,753
Worldwide gross (inflation-adjusted): $149,484
Worldwide gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 2,979
Worldwide tickets sold (est.): 16,301
 
US/Canada gross: NA
US/Canada gross (inflation-adjusted): NA
US/Canada gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): NA
US/Canada opening weekend:
US/Canada opening weekend (inflation-adjusted): NA
US/Canada opening weekend ranking (inflation-adjusted): NA
 
Budget and Earnings Details
Production budget (est.): NA
Production budget (inflation-adjusted): NA
Production budget ranking: NA
Marketing and distribution budget (inflation-adjusted est.): NA
Box office net earnings to date (inflation-adjusted est.): NA
ROI to date (est.): NA
ROI ranking: NA

 
Movie Cast & Crew

Cast & Crew

Patricio GuzmánRaúl ZuritaPatricio GuzmánRenate SachseAdrien Oumhani
Patricio Guzmán
Raúl Zurita
Patricio Guzmán
Renate Sachse
Adrien Oumhani
Patricio Guzmán
Raúl Zurita
Patricio Guzmán
Renate Sachse
Adrien Oumhani
Patricio Guzmán – Voice/Narrator
Raúl Zurita – Self
Patricio Guzmán – Director/Writer
Renate Sachse – Producer
Adrien Oumhani – Executive Producer

 

Patricio GuzmánPatricio GuzmánRenate Sachse
Patricio Guzmán
Patricio Guzmán
Renate Sachse
Director
Writer
Producer
Producer
Producer

Director(s)
Patricio Guzmán
 
Writer(s)
Patricio Guzmán
 
Producer(s)
Renate Sachse

 
Movie Reviews & Awards
Film Festivals
Berlin, Toronto
 
Awards & Nominations
11 wins & 12 nominations
 
Academy Awards

 

Top Reviews
Bilge EbiriNigel AndrewsKate TaylorMark KermodeKate Muir
Bilge Ebiri
Nigel Andrews
Kate Taylor
Mark Kermode
Kate Muir
Spirituality & Health
Financial Times
Globe and Mail
Observer (UK)
Times (UK)
THE PEARL BUTTON
  All Critics (47) | Top Critics (23) | Fresh (44) | Rotten (3)
  This is a rapturous, unsettling movie about beauty, mystery, and unimaginable horror.
 
  March 24, 2020
 
  Bilge Ebiri
  Spirituality & Health
  TOP CRITIC
  This documentary holds every card in the pack, from geology to anthropology to the history of tribes and tyrants, and plays them like a master.
 
  December 28, 2016 | Rating: 5/5
 
  Nigel Andrews
  Financial Times
  TOP CRITIC
  This haunting Chilean documentary is more poetry than journalism as filmmaker Patricio Guzman compares the fate of the indigenous people of Patagonia with that of the disappeared of the Pinochet regime.
 
  April 8, 2016 | Rating: 4/4
 
  Kate Taylor
  Globe and Mail
  TOP CRITIC
  As always, Guzmán unearths details that establish resonant connections between diverse worlds (the “pearl button” of the title proves typically allusive) but at a brief 82 minutes this feels like too many streams gathering in one overcrowded pool.
 
  March 20, 2016 | Rating: 3/5
 
  Mark Kermode
  Observer (UK)
  TOP CRITIC
  The Pearl Button is a piece of visual poetry that meanders along the waterways, coastline and history of Chile, coming into sharp and horrifying focus on the atrocities of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.
 
  March 18, 2016 | Rating: 4/5
 
  Kate Muir
  Times (UK)
  TOP CRITIC
  Patricio Guzmán’s essay-style documentary is a deceptive but very moving affair.
 
  March 18, 2016 | Rating: 4/5
 
  Geoffrey Macnab
  Independent (UK)
  TOP CRITIC
  Through Guzmán’s unique lens, the history of the natives becomes a kind of ethereal reflection of the universe, irrevocably changed by colonialism and western invasion.
 
  August 7, 2019 | Rating: 3.5/4
 
  Mattie Lucas
  From the Front Row
  Far from conventional, this gorgeously soundtracked documentary is a treat for filmgoers willing to be engrossed by Malickian imagery…
 
  May 17, 2019 | Rating: 4/5
 
  Nick Evan-Cook
  One Room With A View
  An astoundingly beautiful visual essay which revels in the stunning scenery of Chilean Patagonia, it morphs into a harrowing depiction of the nation’s distant and recent past.
 
  April 9, 2019 | Rating: 4/5
 
  Matthew Anderson
  CineVue
  Guzmán’s predilection for naïve wide-eyed wonder weighs down his recent films, never eclipses the most striking feature of his work: the way in which dreamy musings and far-fetched speculations coexist with toughness, prickliness, and matter-of-factness
 
  November 14, 2017
 
  Max Nelson
  Cinema Scope
  A fascinating journey through Chile’s troubled past.
 
  May 10, 2017
 
  Mary Palmer
  Daily Record (UK)
  The most recent documentary by Patricio Guzmán explores and faces the past and the presen of Chile, looking at the heavens and turning down, towards the earth. Or, in this case, to the sea. [Full review in Spanish]
 
  March 8, 2017
 
  Ernesto Diezmartinez
  Cine Vértigo…

 
Movie Plot & More
Plot
Filmmaker Patricio Guzmán explores the connection between Patagonian waterways and genocide in the haunting and poetic documentary, The Pearl Button.
 
Trivia

 
Goofs / Tidbits
The critic reviews for The Pearl Button describe it as “rapturous,” “haunting,” and “visual poetry.”
 
Movie Links Wikipedia and Rotten Tomatoes

Links
Wikipedia: Go to Wiki
Rotten Tomatoes: Go to RT

 
Where to Watch

Where to Watch

 
Move the ScorePatricio-Guzmán.jpg

Movies, Streaming