Macunaíma (film)
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Macunaíma | |
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original film poster |
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Directed by | Joaquim Pedro de Andrade |
Produced by | Joaquim Pedro de Andrade |
Written by | Joaquim Pedro de Andrade |
Starring | Paulo José Grande Otelo Dina Sfat Jardel Filho |
Cinematography | Guido Cosulich |
Editing by | Eduardo Escorel |
Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
Release date(s) | 1969 |
Running time | 110 min |
Language | Portuguese |
IMDb profile |
Macunaíma is a 1969 Brazilian comedy film, produced by Filmes do Serro and directed by Joaquim Pedro de Andrade. It was released in a dubbed version for American audiences in 1972 by New Line Cinema. On June 13 European and on July 12, 2005 Latin American segments of TV5 network aired the film in its original Portuguese with French subtitles.
[edit] Plot
Based on a 1928 book by Mário de Andrade, the modern-day parable follows the misadventures of a black man who is miraculously born to an old woman, who is supposed to be a be of the indigenous peoples of Brasil, in the jungles of the Amazon. Though born fully-grown, he has the heart of a playful child. After the death of his mother, he comes face to face with a spring that turns him white. With that change, he and his two brothers move to Rio de Janeiro, but are interrogated by street terrorists upon their arrival. Then, thanks to an affair with a white lady, guerrilla killer Ci, the film's hero fathers a black boy with her. When both mother and child die, he embarks on a quest to recover a magical stone from a rich city dweller. In this film, the essentialist myth of the 3 Brazilian races, white,black, and the original natives of Brazil, is supposed to be represented through the protagonist, his brothers, and his mother.
Throughout his adventures, Macunaíma learns some tough lessons about Brazilian life and society. Macunaima functions as an allegorical representation of the turmoil of the Brazilian military coup that had ensued.
[edit] External links
- Macunaíma at the Internet Movie Database
- Reviews of the film at: Spirituality & Health | BrazilBrazil | Jump Cut