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38 Londres Street: Sebastian Stan Confirmed, Ana de Armas, Alfredo Castro & Antonia Zegers Added to Gálvez’s ‘Impunity’

As we inch closer to Cannes, we are learning the film package identities to the ten Investors Circle Initiative and among the hottest items we have The Settlers (Los Colonos) filmmaker Felipe Gálvez‘s high voltage sophomore feature which he wrote alongside Mariano Llinás, Antonia Girardi. Variety reports that Sebastian Stan is indeed a lock (we reported on this back in November) and Ana de Armas, Alfredo Castro, Antonia Zegers, and Alejandro Goic have been added. There is no production start date mentioned so we are tentatively assuming this will shoot sometime this year for a 2027 drop. We find cinematographer Simone D’Arcangelo, , costume designer Muriel Parra, composer Harry Allouche, and editor Matthieu Taponier. This will be shot between Chile, U.K., Spain – in English and in Spanish. Here is the book description:

Based on the upcoming book 38 Londres Street by Philippe Sands, On the evening of October 16, 1998, Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet was arrested at a medical clinic in London. After a brutal, seventeen-year reign marked by assassinations, disappearances, and torture—frequently tied to the infamous detention center at the heart of Santiago, Londres 38—Pinochet was being indicted for international crimes and extradition to Spain, opening the door to criminal charges that would follow him to the grave, in 2006.

Three decades earlier, on the evening of December 3, 1962, SS-Commander Walter Rauff was arrested in his home in Punta Arenas, at the southern tip of Chile. As the overseer of the development and use of gas vans in World War II, he was indicted for the mass murder of tens of thousands of Jews and faced extradition to West Germany.

Would these uncommon criminals be held accountable? Were their stories connected? The Nuremberg Trials—where Rauff’s crimes had first been read into the record, in 1945—opened the door to universal jurisdiction, and Pinochet’s case would be the first effort to ensnare a former head of state.

In this unique blend of memoir, courtroom drama, and travelogue, Philippe Sands gives us a front row seat to the Pinochet trial—where he acted as a barrister for Human Rights Watch—and teases out the dictator’s unexpected connection to a leading Nazi who ended up managing a king crab cannery in Patagonia. A decade-long journey exposes the chilling truth behind the lives of two men and their intertwined destinies on 38 Londres Street.

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