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Netflix's 'The Eternaut' makes a haunting series of an esteemed Argentine comic

Ricardo Darín as Juan.
Mariano Landet
/
Netflix
Ricardo Darín as Juan.

The Eternaut begins on Netflix with a shot of a borrowed sailboat on a beautiful summer's night. The lights of Buenos Aires twinkle in the background as three high school girls who've been drinking more than they should toast to "all the beautiful things that await."

As they hug, they don't notice the lights of the city blacking out behind them. They're looking the other way, at a strange green glow in the heavens — the first indication that their story is based on a sci-fi graphic novel of uncommon staying power.

Their boat begins to rock, and one of the girls pops below deck to discover their GPS isn't working. Neither is her cellphone. Then she hears a thump, and looks out a window in horror as first one, then the other of her friends collapse. Her eyes and the camera fix on a single flake of snow.

In the city, when the electricity goes out, some old friends who've gathered to play cards chalk it up to yet another power outage. But as they joke about that, they hear loud bangs outside. They go to the window and also see what looks like snow.

"In summer?" one wonders. Then cars crash and people drop in the street, and they realize something outside is toxic.

One of the card-players, Juan, tries to call his daughter, but nothing electronic is working. So the others scramble to help him turn what they can find around the cluttered house – an old gas mask, waterproofed clothing, gloves – into some sort of protection. Protection against what, they're not sure.

And Juan heads out — looking like a cross between an astronaut and a deep sea diver — into a Buenos Aires at once familiar and ghostly. He walks past corpses seemingly felled in mid-gesture — two policemen who'd been chatting through a car window, a power line repairman suspended high in the air, leaning back in his harness, lifeless atop a telephone pole. And everywhere he goes, there's a light dusting of apparently toxic snow.

Andrea Pietra as Ana, Carla Peterson as Elena, Marcelo Subiotto as Lucas.
Marcos Ludevid / Netflix
/
Netflix
Andrea Pietra as Ana, Carla Peterson as Elena, Marcelo Subiotto as Lucas.

Chilling for any viewer — I'll stop here, just a few minutes into the first episode so you can discover the rest for yourself — these scenes have a special resonance in Argentina, where the story originated as a comic book serial almost 70 years ago.

Like audiences everywhere, Argentine movie patrons are mostly accustomed to disaster films set in cities north of the equator. But El Eternauta is homegrown, politically freighted, and has acquired near mythic status since it was first published in 1957.

Partly that's because it's a terrific sci-fi mystery – set in familiar locales, with muscular illustrations by Francisco Solano López. And partly, it's because writer Héctor Germán Oesterheld, a committed leftist whose work grew more overtly political as his career went on, rebooted the story a dozen years later, amplifying what had always driven the story — the need for collective action to overcome societal horrors.

That in 1977, during a brutal military dictatorship, Oesterheld and his four daughters were all "disappeared" added immeasurably to the graphic novel's resonance. Today it's regarded as an Argentine pop culture classic.

Oesterheld's widow was adamant that the story be filmed in Spanish and shot in Buenos Aires. After decades of copyright disputes and false starts by an array of Argentine and Spanish filmmakers, director Bruno Stagnaro was finally able to begin filming in 2023, after pandemic shutdowns turned much of Buenos Aires into a real-life ghost-town during COVID-19. Masked figures roaming deserted streets became haunting in a freshly traumatic way.

The series, with its protagonist played soulfully by Ricardo Darín, Argentina's most famous actor, brings the action from the 1950s to an age of cellphones, and fills in characters in ways the original didn't. But it's a largely faithful adaptation, and with Argentine society currently roiled by political and social frustration, it has been well received.

Subway tiles in Buenos Aires' Uruguay station depict scenes from the comic version of El Eternauta. Tile illustration by Alberto Breccia.
Carlos Schröder /
Subway tiles in Buenos Aires' Uruguay station depict scenes from the comic version of El Eternauta. Tile illustration by Alberto Breccia.

That was not a given, considering the esteem in which the graphic novel is held. An esteem that led decades ago to the installation of a huge tile mural in the Uruguay subway station in Buenos Aires — a platform-wide El Eternauta illustration to remind commuters that a climactic battle in a story they've long taken to heart was fought right where they're standing.

That's a battle not in the six Eternaut episodes currently available on Netflix (in Spanish, or dubbed in English). But a title card at the end of the final, cliff-hanging episode notes, "It's official: a second season is coming."

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Bob Mondello, who jokes that he was a jinx at the beginning of his critical career — hired to write for every small paper that ever folded in Washington, just as it was about to collapse — saw that jinx broken in 1984 when he came to NPR.