Chile to California: Surfing the Dream Wave at Victoria Theatre – San Francisco, CA

Chile to California: Surfing the Dream Wave at Victoria Theatre – San Francisco, CA
Don’t miss this upcoming event in San Francisco, CA. Happening on Sunday, October 5, 2025 at Victoria Theatre. Doors open at 2:00 PM.
Chile to California: Surfing the Dream Wave
Cine Chileno in San Francisco presents:
Viejo Perro and El Diario de “El Gringo.”
Supported by a grant from SF New Deal
Media Sponsor: Hecho en California
Fiscal Sponsor: Mutually Assured Productions
TICKETS: $20 adv. / $25 door
Cine Chileno in San Francisco presenta Viejo Perro y su spin-off El Diario de “El Gringo,” proyectados juntos por primera vez.
Cine Chileno in San Francisco presents the documentaries Viejo Perro and its spin-off El Diario de “El Gringo,” screening together for the first time.
Special Guest in Attendance
Filmmaker Rodrigo Farías Moreno
Cecilia Tello, sister of legendary Chilean surf pioneer Lucho Tello
Consul General of Chile in San Francisco, Patricio Cabezas Logan
Two documentaries that explore the roots of Chilean surf:
Viejo Perro — the rise of surfing in Chile.
El Diario de “El Gringo” — the story of how three California surfers, Gary Schuberg, Pat Dennis, and Jim Crane discovered the world-famous wave “El Gringo” in Arica, Chile, in 1977.
These events are part of a California tour connecting Chilean surf culture to an American audience.
PROGRAM
2:00 | Doors open
2:30 | Welcome & introduction
2:45 | —Film: Viejo Perro
3:25 | Intermission
4:00 | —Film: El Diario de “El Gringo”
4:45 | Q&A with filmmaker Rodrigo Farías Moreno and Cecilia Tello
5:30 | Closing remarks & mixer at Chile Lindo (next door)
Producer: Paula Tejeda
Founder, Chile Lindo—San Francisco Legacy Business l 2025
Viejo Perro
Following is the translation of a newspaper clipping of Cecilia Tello and a friend trying out the first surfboards in Chile, at a time when the sport was still virtually unknown in Chile.
“At Playa Larga, between Quintero and Las Ventanas, these two young women, along with many others, practice “surfing” every Sunday—an adventurous water sport that consists of gliding over the waves on “fiber boards,” like the ones shown here. One doesn’t always make it back to shore in perfect shape, but it is precisely the risk that gives surfing its appeal. Both young women pose here with a smile alongside their hawayanas boards.”