Raul The Terrible is a 2006 Australian documentary film created by David Bradbury.
Bradbury and his team had close access to him for a period of three months and then filmed for a second period when Castells was engaged in a hunger strike.
[1] [2] It was Ettinger-Epstein debut film and stemmed from a chance meeting at the Matthew Talbot refuge in Woolloomooloo after which she saw his photographs.
[3] Doug Anderson of the Sydney Morning Herald wrote "Not terribly well compiled but worthy as all get-out"[4] Newcastle Herald's Kylie Cooper says in her capsule review "this warts-and-all portrait of a man driven to change his world, provides an insight into the politics of poverty in twenty-first century Argentina.
"[5] Also with a capsule review the Age's Paul Kalina said "Veteran Australia filmmaker David Bradbury casts a wryly humorous eye on Argentine dissident Raul Castells in this warts-and-all portrait of a flawed revolutionary and once affluent nation in economic ruins.