Film festivals London Film Festival 2015

The Pearl Button

London Film Festival 2015: The Pearl Button
London Film Festival 2015: The Pearl Button | Review
Public screenings
15th October 2015 6.30pm at Picturehouse Central
16th October 2015 3.15pm at BFI Southbank

Patricio Guzmán’s The Pearl Button functions both as an account of Chilean history – told from the perspective of the “losers” – and a kind of guided meditation that explores the waters that border the country. The Pearl Button is undoubtedly a spiritual sequel to  Guzmán’s previous film Nostalgia for the Light, which used the Atacama Desert as a centre piece for examining Chile’s past. What Nostalgia of the Light did for the desert, The Pearl Button does for the ocean.

This film is very similar to director Ron Fricke’s non-narrative documentary films Baraka and Samsara, in that it investigates the wonders of the world, accentuating stunning visuals, with little thought for narrative or story. The Pearl Button is a meditative piece that attempts to intimately weld Chilean history with the oceans of planet Earth – for the sea holds all the voices of Earth’s past, as is provocatively stated in the film.

Amongst the dazzling images of Chile’s massively indented coastline, numerous mountains, volcanoes and glaciers, Guzmán incorporates accounts and tales by the elders of different cultures from Chile’s ancient past, as well as early 20th-century photographs, which culminates in one of the most beautiful history lessons ever made.

However, the links between Chilean history and the waters surrounding the country do not seem adequately connected throughout – Guzmán fails to unify two different themes as well as he had intended. Two fantastic, but wildly disparate documentaries lay within the confines of one – and they need to be exhumed!

Guzmán’s five-year absence from the documentary scene has not at all impeded his ability to make a visually engaging piece, but The Pearl Button falls a little short of his previous work, narratively and thematically speaking. Though, it’s still a ridiculously relaxing and educational feature that highlights a largely ignored area of history.

Jordon Ward

The Pearl Button does not have a UK release date yet.

For further information about the 59th London Film Festival visit here, and for more of our coverage visit here.

Watch the trailer for The Pearl Button here:

More in Film festivals

Florence Korea Film Fest 2026: The Mutation

Laura Della Corte

“It’s chaotic, it’s messy, it’s human”: Nick Butler, Noah Parker and Liza Weil on Lunar Sway at BFI Flare 2026

Sarah Bradbury

Madfabulous

Antonia Georgiou

Washed Up

Andrew Murray

“I just focused on expressing reality”: Yang Jong-hyun on People and Meat at Florence Korea Film Fest 2026

Laura Della Corte

“Everything began with their ambition and their desire”: Lee Hwan on Project Y at Florence Korea Film Fest 2026

Laura Della Corte

“I was paying more attention to the message I wanted to convey than to Florence itself”: Lee Chang-yeol on Florence Knockin’ on You at Florence Korea Film Fest 2026

Laura Della Corte

“I try to capture the aspects of society itself”: Yeon Sang-ho on The Ugly at Florence Korea Film Fest 2026

Laura Della Corte

Lunar Sway

Andrew Murray