O Pagador de Promessas

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Keeper of Promises
(O Pagador de Promessas)

Original poster in Portuguese
Directed by Anselmo Duarte
Produced by Francisco de Castro
Anselmo Duarte
Oswaldo Massaini
Written by Dias Gomes (play)
Anselmo Duarte
Starring Leonardo Villar
Glória Menezes
Norma Bengell
Dionísio Azevedo
Music by Gabriel Migliori
Cinematography H.E. Fowle
Editing by Carlos Coimbra
Distributed by Cinedistri (Original release)
Globo Vídeo (Re-release)
Lionex Films Inc. (US)
Doperfilme (Portugal)
Release date(s) United States March 24, 1964 (NYC only)
Running time 98 min
Language Portuguese
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

O Pagador de Promessas is a 1962 Brazilian drama film directed by Anselmo Duarte. Its title tranlates as The Payer of Promises, but the film has also been known by several other names in the English-speaking world, including Keeper of Promises, The Given Word and The Promise.

Duarte (who was also one of the film's producers) adapted the screenplay himself from the famous stage play written by Dias Gomes. The film won the 1962 Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival and it was the first Brazilian movie ever to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Zé do Burro (Leonardo Villar) is a very poor man from Nordeste, Brazil. His most prized possession is a donkey. When his donkey falls terminally ill, Zé makes a promise to God: if his donkey recovers, he will carry a cross (like Jesus Christ) all the way from his farm to the cathedral of Salvador, Bahia. Upon the recover of his donkey, Zé leaves on his journey. He makes it all the way to the cathedral, but when he gets there he has to face the priest, who refuses to accept the cross once he hears the reason for such sacrifice.

[edit] Main cast

  • Leonardo Villar as Zé do Burro (Joe of the Donkey)
  • Glória Menezes as Rosa, Zé's wife
  • Dionísio Azevedo as Olavo, the priest
  • Geraldo Del Rey as Bonitão (Handsome guy)
  • Norma Bengell as Marly, the prostitute
  • Othon Bastos as Reporter

[edit] Awards & nominations

[edit] External links

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Preceded by:
The Long Absence
tied with Viridiana
Palme d'Or
1962
Succeeded by:
The Leopard
In other languages