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Gael García Bernal hunts for Neruda

Actor Gael García Bernal and director Pablo Larraín tell us about their ‘false biopic.’

A radical poet fleeing from a corrupt government, chased by a policeman across the stunning scenery of southern Chile - sounds like an ideal setting for a thriller, but this really happened to famous poet and Chilean politician Pablo Neruda in 1948.

Actor Gael García Bernal and Pablo Larraín, director of the Oscar-nominated film Jackie, tell us about their ‘false biopic’ Neruda, an inventive and playful story about the poet’s time as a fugitive, pursued by the determined policeman Peluchonneau (Bernal). Neruda (Luis Gnecco) becomes so excited by this game of cat-and-mouse that he comes to enjoy the feeling of being chased, leaving crime novels containing personalised notes to his pursuer behind to toy with the policeman’s mind, and the two men become obsessed with each other as the manhunt continues.

“Neruda liked crime stories – that’s why the film turns out to be a road movie with a police investigation element”, says Larraín. He explains that they were more interested in being truthful to the poet’s literary legacy rather than creating a 100% accurate biopic: “We invented a world, just as Neruda invented his. The film we made is more a “Nerudian” film than it is a film about Neruda, or perhaps it’s both. We created a novel that we would have liked Neruda to read.”

Even in hiding, Pablo Neruda continued to write poetry that challenged Chile’s leaders and inspired its citizens, and was even championed abroad by the likes of Pablo Picasso. He achieved worldwide recognition, and in 1971 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Neruda is released in the UK on Friday 7 April 2017.

Release date:

Duration:

3 minutes

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