In a moment when the boundaries between technology, storytelling, and conservation are increasingly blurred, Forasteras —two Chilean expedition storytellers—present En Chile Cabe un Planeta, an audiovisual piece filmed entirely on iPhone 17 Pro that proposes a new way of seeing Chile’s territory.

Created by Camila Rikli and Teresita Pérez, the project begins with a powerful premise: few countries contain such extreme ecological diversity within a single map. In Chile, the driest desert on Earth coexists with temperate rainforests, thousands of kilometers of coastline, and a natural gateway to Antarctica. Distinct ecosystems, yet deeply interconnected.

Far from functioning as a traditional tourism campaign, En Chile Cabe un Planeta approaches Chile as a living system. Glacial melt impacts the ocean, the ocean regulates climate, forests capture moisture and carbon—everything is part of the same natural conversation.

The project was developed by Forasteras under their signature approach to expedition storytelling: long journeys, on-the-ground work, local immersion, and a narrative in which experience matters as much as the image itself. Over the course of several months, they traveled across diverse landscapes, capturing scenes in demanding conditions—from Patagonian winds to remote, logistically complex shoots.

One of its most striking aspects is that the entire production was shot on iPhone 17 Pro, demonstrating how next-generation mobile technology can meet cinematic and documentary standards. Portability, responsiveness, and high image quality made it possible to capture spontaneous moments in places where traditional equipment is often impractical.

The result is a contemporary visual piece—agile and emotionally resonant—that balances technical precision with narrative sensitivity. Rather than simply portraying landscapes, it seeks to reveal the invisible relationships between territories that may appear distant from one another.

With En Chile Cabe un Planeta, Forasteras reinforces a creative direction that blends adventure, identity, and environmental awareness—proving that today, a powerful story depends less on the size of the camera and more on the perspective behind it.