Ricardo Darín as Juan.
Mariano Landet/Netflix
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Mariano Landet/Netflix
The Eternaut begins on Netflix with a shot of a borrowed sailboat on an exquisite summer season’s evening. The lights of Buenos Aires twinkle within the background as three highschool women who’ve been ingesting greater than they need to toast to “all the beautiful things that await.”
As they hug, they do not discover the lights of town blacking out behind them. They’re wanting the opposite manner, at an odd inexperienced glow within the heavens — the primary indication that their story is predicated on a sci-fi graphic novel of unusual endurance.
Their boat begins to rock, and one of many women pops beneath deck to find their GPS is not working. Neither is her cellphone. Then she hears a thump, and appears out a window in horror as first one, then the opposite of her buddies collapse. Her eyes and the digital camera repair on a single flake of snow.
Within the metropolis, when the electrical energy goes out, some previous buddies who’ve gathered to play playing cards chalk it as much as one more energy outage. However as they joke about that, they hear loud bangs outdoors. They go to the window and in addition see what seems to be like snow.
“In summer?” one wonders. Then vehicles crash and other people drop on the street, and so they understand one thing outdoors is poisonous.
One of many card-players, Juan, tries to name his daughter, however nothing digital is working. So the others scramble to assist him flip what they’ll discover across the cluttered home – an previous gasoline masks, waterproofed clothes, gloves – into some type of safety. Safety towards what, they are not certain.
And Juan heads out — wanting like a cross between an astronaut and a deep sea diver — right into a Buenos Aires directly acquainted and ghostly. He walks previous corpses seemingly felled in mid-gesture — two policemen who’d been chatting via a automobile window, an influence line repairman suspended excessive within the air, leaning again in his harness, lifeless atop a phone pole. And in every single place he goes, there is a gentle dusting of apparently poisonous snow.

Andrea Pietra as Ana, Carla Peterson as Elena, Marcelo Subiotto as Lucas.
Marcos Ludevid/Netflix
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Marcos Ludevid/Netflix
Chilling for any viewer — I am going to cease right here, only a few minutes into the primary episode so you possibly can uncover the remainder for your self — these scenes have a particular resonance in Argentina, the place the story originated as a comic book ebook serial virtually 70 years in the past.
Like audiences in every single place, Argentine film patrons are principally accustomed to catastrophe movies set in cities north of the equator. However El Eternauta is homegrown, politically freighted, and has acquired close to mythic standing because it was first revealed in 1957.
Partly that is as a result of it is a terrific sci-fi thriller – set in acquainted locales, with muscular illustrations by Francisco Solano López. And partly, it is as a result of author Héctor Germán Oesterheld, a dedicated leftist whose work grew extra overtly political as his profession went on, rebooted the story a dozen years later, amplifying what had at all times pushed the story — the necessity for collective motion to beat societal horrors.
That in 1977, throughout a brutal navy dictatorship, Oesterheld and his 4 daughters have been all “disappeared” added immeasurably to the graphic novel’s resonance. Right this moment it is considered an Argentine popular culture traditional.
Oesterheld’s widow was adamant that the story be filmed in Spanish and shot in Buenos Aires. After a long time of copyright disputes and false begins by an array of Argentine and Spanish filmmakers, director Bruno Stagnaro was lastly capable of start filming in 2023, after pandemic shutdowns turned a lot of Buenos Aires right into a real-life ghost-town throughout COVID-19. Masked figures roaming abandoned streets turned haunting in a freshly traumatic manner.
The collection, with its protagonist performed soulfully by Ricardo Darín, Argentina’s most well-known actor, brings the motion from the Fifties to an age of cellphones, and fills in characters in methods the unique did not. However it’s a largely devoted adaptation, and with Argentine society presently roiled by political and social frustration, it has been nicely acquired.

Subway tiles in Buenos Aires’ Uruguay station depict scenes from the comedian model of El Eternauta. Tile illustration by Alberto Breccia.
Carlos Schröder
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Carlos Schröder
That was not a given, contemplating the esteem during which the graphic novel is held. An esteem that led a long time in the past to the set up of an enormous tile mural within the Uruguay subway station in Buenos Aires — a platform-wide El Eternauta illustration to remind commuters {that a} climactic battle in a narrative they’ve lengthy taken to coronary heart was fought proper the place they’re standing.
That is a battle not within the six Eternaut episodes presently out there on Netflix (in Spanish, or dubbed in English). However a title card on the finish of the ultimate, cliff-hanging episode notes, “It’s official: a second season is coming.”