Ellen E Jones 

El Conde review – Pinochet rises from the dead in Pablo Larraín’s gothic horror

The Chilean dictator returns as a vampire – and his family’s out for blood. But this alternative history, though entertaining, feels​ politically enigmatic
  
  

a black and white still of a man looking down at a black and white tiled floor in a grand room, wearing a soldier's hat and a cloak
Jaime Vadell as General Pinochet, ‘hoping for death’ in El Conde. Netflix Photograph: ©2023 Netflix, Inc.

After the ethereal, English-language Spencer, Chilean director Pablo Larraín returns home with this gothic monochrome alt-history, imagining murderous dictator General Pinochet as a 250-year-old vampire. Having faked his death, Pinochet (Jaime Vadell), AKA El Conde, is hiding out in the crumbling grandeur of his Patagonian lair, hoping for death. This end-of-life ennui is disturbed by his money-grubbing family, not-so-loyal servant (Alfredo Castro) and a comely accountant-nun (Paula Luchsinger).

All are entertaining in turn, though none manages to drive a stake through the dark heart of Larraín’s often enigmatic political point. It’s down to the arch, instantly recognisable narration to really skewer crony-capitalism, while Larraín’s film demonstrates a palate for mordant humour as refined as the count’s taste for blood.

Watch a trailer for El Conde.
 

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