June 15, 2026

A YARD OF JACKALS: Not Your Standard Political Thriller


A YARD OF JACKALS (Blu-ray)
2024 / 108 min
Review by Princess Pepper😺

When I finish a film thinking, “What the hell did I just watch?,” it generally means one of two things. Either it’s two hours of my life won’t get back, or the movie is so weird, surreal and intriguingly perplexing that it resonates long after the credits roll. The Chilean film, A Yard of Jackals is among the latter. 

It’s 1975, and Chile is ruled by a military dictatorship. Raul (Nestor Cantillana) lives in a small apartment where he cares for his ailing mother while earning a living constructing models commissioned by that same military. He’s also kind of sweet on Laura (Blanca Lewin), who operates a nearby shop with her younger sister (Maria Jesus Marcone).


His efforts to keep a low profile are put to the test when mysterious new neighbors move into the apartment next door, one of whom always seems omnipresent, watching Raul through windows or from his car on the street. Though never named, he’s played with subtle menace by Rodrigo Perez. It soon becomes clear that the apartment is being used to torture members of a political resistance movement.


Raul fiercely guards his laundry.
While that’s the nutshell plot, A Yard of Jackals does not unfold like a standard political thriller. In fact, it largely achieves the tone of a slow burning horror film, punctuated by an overall aesthetic that feels downright claustrophobic at times. The narrative is presented entirely from Raul’s point of view, which includes surreal sequences and imagery that kind of establish him as an unreliable narrator.

However, this isn’t a difficult story to follow, and for patient viewers, the way writer-director Diego Figueroa slowly builds dread is pretty impressive. But what really makes the film memorable is the climax and denouement, which I can almost guarantee you won’t see coming. If nothing else, it’s a shocker of a plot-twist, yet ultimately makes complete sense within the context of what’s previously transpired. 


At the same time, I can imagine some viewers considering that same twist to be a frustratingly ambiguous way to end a movie, perhaps feeling they just endured a two-hour bait & switch. I’ll also concede there are moments where the pace could’ve been just a little bit snappier. A Yard of Jackals is expanded from a short film also directed by Figueroa, and it sometimes kinda shows. Aside from that, it’s a quietly unnerving experience.


EXTRA KIBBLES

MAKING-OF FEATURETTE - Features director and cast interviews.

IN-PICTURE COMMENTARY - By writer/director Diego Figueroa and filmmaker Inti Carrozo-Ortiz.

TRAILER


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