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How Netflix hit The Eternaut brings real past horrors home in Argentina

The show has reopened historical wounds in Argentina at a moment of heightened anxiety about society under far-right President Javier Milei

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An advertisement for Netflix’s new series The Eternaut is partially covered by posters of sci-fi comic author Hector Oesterheld and his daughters - who were forcibly disappeared  in 1977 during Argentina’s military dictatorship - in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on May 6, 2025. Photo: AP
Associated Press

A group of friends gather to play cards in their host’s cosy home when the power cuts. Mobile phones die. An eerie snow falls all over the city, killing everyone it touches. The friends struggle to survive, their panic replaced by a growing awareness that humanity itself is at stake.

This is the premise of The Eternaut, a chilling dystopian drama out of Argentina that is streaming on Netflix.

With its mix of sci-fi elements and focus on human resilience, the six-episode, Spanish-language series has struck a universal nerve, rocketing to No 1 among Netflix’s most-streamed non-English-language TV shows within days.

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Netflix has already renewed the show for a second season, with filming scheduled to start in 2026.

Ricardo Darin plays lead character Juan Salvo in a still from The Eternaut. Photo: Reuters
Ricardo Darin plays lead character Juan Salvo in a still from The Eternaut. Photo: Reuters

But The Eternaut has touched on something deeper in Argentina, where legendary comic-strip writer Hector German Oesterheld penned the original graphic novel in 1957 – two decades before he was “disappeared” by Argentina’s military dictatorship, along with all four of his daughters.

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Abroad, publishers are scrambling to keep pace with renewed interest in the source material. US-based Fantagraphics said it would reissue an out-of-print English translation because of the surge in US demand.

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