Ticket to Heaven: Gallenberger Depicts Chilean Torture Cult
Arriving in Chile on the eve of Pinochet’s military coup, flight attendant Lena (Emma Watson) makes a surprise visit to her activist boyfriend Daniel (Daniel Bruhl), an Allende supporter in Santiago. But they suddenly find themselves trapped in a maelstrom of terror, and Daniel is abducted and shipped off to a mysterious compound in the forest known as Colonia Dignidad (The Colony of Dignity). While the rest of Allende’s supporters are forced into hiding, Lena treks into the forest and avails herself to the cult, infiltrating it in hopes of finding Daniel. But she isn’t quite prepared for the atrocities she’s about to witness.
The lack of a decidedly Chilean perspective isn’t quite as ludicrous as Patricia Riggen’s The 33 (2015) due to Colonia Dignidad’s German founder, but the adherence to English language sometimes aids this distraction. Likewise the focus on the overly determined characterization of Lena is somewhat hampered by Emma Watson’s dubious performance as a mole desperate to locate her abducted boyfriend. Watson seems calibrated specifically as a cypher for the audience’s concerns and anxieties, but never seems like someone trying to acquiesce believably into a cult. Daniel Bruhl’s plight is more gripping, subjected to extreme tortures allowing him the possibility to pretend to be handicapped and non-threatening as a means to plot escape. As the enigmatic cult leader, Swede Michael Nyqvist does justice to the German Schafer, enough so a more in-depth expose on how this bizarre cult managed to be created and so carefully maintained seems necessary. As the keeper of the young women, British actress Richenda Carey is marvelously effective as an abusive, manipulative warden.
DP Kolja Brandt (Erased, 2012) creates a masterful menace with the isolated compound, boxed in with shadowy foliage. Gallenberger and first time screenwriter Torsten Wenzel tend to shy from extremes, despite several moments of implied brutality, including a sequence of appallingly conditioned misogyny. Colonia is fascinating, and seems to align with Gallenberger’s interests in historical reenactments, such as his previous 2009 title John Rabe. Though it’s not ultimately as powerful as it could be, it does have an anxiety inducing finale, (which seems reminiscent of a seemingly exaggerated climax in 2012’s Argo), the film is well worth a look.
★★½/☆☆☆☆☆