
“Stranded: I’ve Come From a Plane That Crashed on the Mountains” is an exceptional film, at once disturbing and elevating.
“Stranded’s” narrative is familiar because, under the title “Alive,” it was both an internationally best- selling book and a Hollywood movie starring Ethan Hawke.
Who doesn’t have at least a vague knowledge of the story of the Uruguayan airliner that slammed into the Andes in 1972, and of the 16 young men who survived an unheard-of 72 days in part because they did the unthinkable and ate the flesh of those who died?
But it is only now, more than three decades after the fact, that all the people who made it out alive agreed to talk on camera with breathtaking candor and startling detail.
Against all expectation, the survivors’ experience turns out to have been a surprisingly spiritual one, a story of near-reincarnation and intimate religious communion.
One reason these men finally unburdened themselves was that veteran documentarian Gonzalo Arijon was a boyhood friend of many of the young men who got on that plane on Friday, Oct. 13, 1972.
And what persuasive, articulate talkers the “Stranded” survivors turn out to be. We hang on their every word as these voices combine to remember every moment with a vividness and an immediacy that is overwhelming.
Since no film exists of the “Stranded” experience (with the exception of newsreel footage of the rescue), Arijon made the risky decision to use re-creations to help tell the story.
Because no one in the re-creations talks on camera, the sequences come off as dreamlike and haunting, which is as they should be.
The re-creations are also an effective companion piece to “Stranded’s” contemporary footage, which follows the adult survivors as they take a summertime trip back to the Valley of Tears in the Andes, the original crash site, and try to convey to their children the nature of the experience.
These men were just 19 years old themselves in 1972, members of a rugby team associated with a Catholic school, headed for a game in Santiago, Chile, and what they thought would be a weekend “full of adventure and excitement.”
The crash itself killed 12 of the 45 passengers, and numerous others gradually died from a combination of injuries and starvation. When those still alive heard on their still- functioning radio that the search for them had been abandoned, they came around with tremendous reluctance to the notion of what they had to do to survive.
“Stranded” emphasizes that what kept this deeply Catholic group together was its “strong sense of unity and solidarity” and that the decision to eat human flesh was done in the respectful spirit of the most serious religious ritual.
The group was finally rescued when two of their number walked for 10 days to reach help, going so far (44 miles over peaks that reached 13,000 feet) that the rescue helicopter pilots they guided back to their friends thought they couldn’t possibly have covered so great a distance.
Roberto Cannessa, one of the two who went for help, was at “Stranded’s” Sundance premiere, and it’s no exaggeration to say that what he experienced has turned him into a figure of enormous charisma and grace.
Asked at the screening to reflect on it all, he replied quietly, “Make plans for 100 years, but you must be ready to die at any moment.”
“Stranded: I’ve Come From a Plane That Crashed on the Mountains”
Not rated. 2 hours, 10 minutes. In Spanish with English subtitles. Written and directed by Gonzalo Arijon; cinematography by Cesar Charlone; score by Florencia Di Concilio. Opens today at Starz FilmCenter.



