Don't miss the next show!

Join our newsletter to receive a monthly summary about new collections published.
Don't worry, no crap, no spam, we hate that stuff too LOL

the best documentaries hero image popcorn
Documentaries about Venezuela

8 Important Documentaries about Venezuela

Explore the best documentaries about Venezuela

Intro: Documentaries about Venezuela

In this article, we're going to learn more about Venezuela's history, culture and the recent crisis, through a collection of the best documentaries about Venezuela.

Venezuela is a country in South America. It borders Colombia, Guyana and Brazil. This country is known for its biodiversity and its wealth of natural resources. Venezuela has oil reserves that make it the world’s fifth-largest exporter of petroleum. Venezuela also has deposits of coal, iron ore, manganese, nickel and bauxite. The capital city of Caracas is one of the most densely populated cities in the Americas.

Venezuela’s economy depends heavily on the oil industry, which accounted for over 80% of government revenue in 2007. This has caused some people to struggle with poverty and shortages of food, medicine, gasoline and other basic necessities amid inflation rates that have surpassed 50%. There are also problems with water scarcity due to mismanagement that have led to protests against President Nicolás Maduro and his policies. On a positive note, Venezuela is known for its cultural diversity, with people from different countries coming together to share their unique traditions like salsa dancing and playing baseball.

1. History of Venezuela

Venezuela is the world’s fifth-largest oil producer, and it has an abundance of natural resources. It was discovered in 1530 and was colonized by Spain in 1717. The discovery of oil made Venezuela prosperous, but then started to conflict with other countries and gave it a reputation as a country that could cause riots. In 2003, Hugo Chavez led a coup d’état against the president, who was later found dead in 2013. After his death, his vice president took over and has been running the country ever since. Today, Venezuela is running out of resources because they need oil to keep their economy going. The country has gone through many crises since its inception, such as economic collapse due to inflation, food shortage, lack of healthcare services, and violent crime.

2. The Venezuela Crisis: State Of Disaster

A once-rich country, Venezuela is now a broken economy enveloped in crime, corruption and hyperinflation. The downfall of the nation serves as a modern-day macro tragedy. To tell this story in detail, Brian Price works alongside legendary investor Jay Newman to produce a ground-breaking documentary that captures the contrast between millions of starving Venezuelans and government officials who continue to thrive as they are caught up with powerful problems like how commodities were squandered under former President Hugo Chavez's rule or current President Nicolás Maduro's leading role during their time there. Hanging on hope for what might be possible after economic sanctions loosened themselves are potential outside investments called "coffee auctions." Filmed by BRIAN PRICE & JAY NEWMAN at New York City and Caracas, Venezuela.

3. Oil and ruin — exodus from Venezuela

Venezuela is experiencing an unprecedented humanitarian crisis, with widespread hunger and a severe lack of medicines. Four million people have fled the nation, which was once South America's richest, to escape what was once their home country.

Venezuela is in the grips of what is now the world's second-largest refugee crisis after Syria. But unlike Syria, Venezuela isn't mired in civil war and it doesn't have a history of sectarian violence or struggle with powerful armed groups. The country has proven reserves of oil that show no signs of depletion for decades to come, but its population and economy are collapsing due to mismanagement by politicians who are all too willing to sell out their constituents for personal benefits. Corruption permeates Venezuelan society from top-to-bottom - not only do few corruption cases ever see justice delivered at home, political elites often use corrupt practices as tools against each other when seeking power over one another on an international level.

Venezuela once was a wealthy country, with natural resources like oil and gold. But rather than invest in its people or economy, this wealth has been squandered under the current regime. The billions of profits generated by the oil business during 2003-2014 have largely ended up in private pockets, while now that oil prices collapsed in 2014, Venezuela's already dire economic conditions worsened drastically. Nicolás Maduro rose to power after his predecessor Hugo Chavez died; he installed loyal military officers into key positions of government, where they continue to hinder development projects and encourage corruption through their efforts at criminalizing dissenters from within. This model has left Venezuela little more than a state-run criminal enterprise today.

The country has been a pawn in a geopolitical contest over power and natural resources. The US, Russia, and China are all looking to assert their own interests at the expense of others. In addition to this, more than 70 million people have been forced from their homes worldwide due to conflicts that arise as poverty worsens around the world.

4. Special Report: Inside Venezuela

In Venezuela, the country has suffered one of the greatest economic and humanitarian crises in modern history. They are currently in default to their creditors. President Maduro is making a public plea aimed at Joe Biden- it's time for a deal! Bloomberg travels inside Venezuela and sits down with Nicolás Maduro to discuss what they intend to do now that U.S sanctions have been lifted, as well as how things will go forward from here.

5. Venezuela: Most Dangerous City on the Planet - Caracas Documentary

The city with the highest murder rates and the most dangerous population in the world. Discover how people live and survive in one of the most volatile countries on Earth, Venezuela.

6. Hugo Chavez: From Idealistic Soldier To Dubious Dictator

Hugo Chavez was a highly controversial leader in Venezuelan politics. His social and economic reforms were initially greeted by widespread enthusiasm, but this soon gave way to an anti-government backlash. He also had a polarizing effect on the world of international relations: he criticized US foreign policy while playing an important role in legitimizing Cuba, Iran and Venezuela's support for the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Despite these controversies, Hugo Chavez remains one of Latin America's most influential leaders and managed to unite more than 40 countries from South America, Africa and Asia with him.

Hugo Chavez was a Venezuelan politician who died in 2013 at age 58 after being diagnosed with cancer. He served as President from 1999 to 2013, leading Venezuela through its first period of sustained economic growth and now celebrated as one of the best presidents in Latin American history.

7. Venezuela: A Paradise in Hell

The Los Llanos is a vast plain situated in central Venezuela, among the Andes, the Cordillera de la Costa and Guayané Massif. In the dry season, it's an incredibly tough place to live for animals because there isn't much water or any forests where they could get some food from. Alligators and crocodiles also struggle to stay near bushes that become a heaven within this deserted landscape. It gets so cold at night during wintertime, but with lots of rain falling by day time makes life easier for these creatures who need territory. "morrocoi" (endangered species) turtles are one of those struggling not far away!

8. Tupamaro: Urban Guerrillas

Tupamaro is the Venezuelan word for Tupamaros, a group of urban guerrillas who rose up against the dictatorship of President Marcos Pérez Jiménez in the 1960s and 1970s. They were active until they were brutally repressed by the military during El Caracazo in 1989.
In this documentary, we follow two members of the Tupamaro movement as they recount their experiences in an interview for a study on Latin American uprisings.

Conclusions: Documentaries about Venezuela

If you enjoyed this list of documentaries about Venezuela, share with your friends and keep exploring.

Images credits: Unsplash.com