The Promised Land (Spanish: La tierra prometida) is a 1972 Chilean drama film written and directed by Miguel Littín.
The music includes the participation of Inti Illimani and Ángel Parra, whose direction was supervised by Luis Advis.
[2] In the late 1920s, the economic crisis in Chile affected thousands of peasants, as well as displaced nitrate workers from closed northern offices.
One such displaced person, El Traje Cruzado, meets José Durán, and they discuss revolution and the right of peasants to occupy state lands.
When news of the Socialist Republic of Chile reaches them, the peasants arm themselves and occupy the mayor's office in El Huique.