Samba On Your Feet
Samba On Your Feet |
Samba On Your Feet |
Directed by |
Eduardo Montes-Bradley |
Produced by |
Soledad Liendo |
Written by |
Juan Trasmonte |
Narrated by |
Haroldo Costa |
Music by |
Various |
Cinematography |
Mustapha Barat |
Editing by |
Eduardo Montes-Bradley |
Distributed by |
Patagonia Film Group, LLC |
Release date(s) |
November, 2005 |
Running time |
60/80 minutes |
Country |
USA Argentina |
Language |
Portuguese English Subtitles |
Budget |
$140.000 |
Samba On Your Feet is a documentary film directed by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. . The documentary goes behind the scenes of Samba and Carnival in Rio de Janeiro to reveal the cultural clash that gave birth to a new tradition in South America.
Synopsis
In Samba On Your Feet (2006) the filmmakers go behind the Carioca milieu to document samba and carnival. The one-hour documentary traces the influences that contributed to shape the music that consecrated Carnival as one of the most powerful cultural manifestations in Brazil. Roots and perspectives, flesh and ghosts, entities and divinities spread across the slums and over the sidewalks of Salvador, Bahia and Rio de Janeiro are essential to the make-up of the Brazilian musical exponent par excellence. Samba On Your Feet introduces the voices of Cartola, Caetano Veloso, Ismael Silva, Clara Nunes, Clementina and many others whose perspectives on the cultural affairs of Rio de Janeiro that have been carefully articulated with interviews to exponents of the Brazilian culture today. This dialogue between past and present takes place throughout the movie between precious scenes of archive footage from private collection, and government resources. Samba On Your Feet was mostly shot in the marginal slums, in the umbanda terreiros, in the favelas where the less fortunate inhabitants of Rio strive to overcome overwhelming rates crime and illiteracy to the rhythm and soul of the music they call samba.[1][2]
Samba On Your Feet has participate at the Toulouse Film Festival, France 2008; Rio International Film Festival, Brazil 2006; Buenos Aires Independent Film Festival (BAFICI) Argentina 2007; and Toronto Film Festival, Canada 2007. Samba On Your Feet is currently being screened at campuses throughout the United States, and abroad.
Crew and Credits
- Produced and directed by Eduardo Montes-Bradley
- Photography by Mustapha Barat
- Direct Sound by Bruno Fernández
- Written by Juan Trasmonte
Cast
- Haroldo Costa. Historian, and writer. Costa has been involved in the cultural life of Rio de Janeiro since the early 1950s. Today, he's one of the foremost authorities in Carioca folklore, with particular emphasis in Samba and Carnival.
- Xangô da Mangueira. Singer and composer. Xangô is living whiteness to the times when Carnival, and Samba met for the first time in the streets of Rio de Janeiro.
- Tia Surica (Iranette Ferreira Barcellos) (65). Active as a member of the Old Guard of her beloved Portela School of Samba. Her home, known as the "Cafôfo da Surica", is a fertile ground for musicians, and dancers seeking advice and support.
- Herminio Bello de Carvalho. Poet, producer, and composer. Herminio (70) is instrumental in understanding the movement known as MPB (Popular Music Of Brazil). His name is associated with the history of Cartola, Pixinguinha, Nelson Cavaquinho, Carlos Cachaça, Elton Medeiros, Mauricio Tapajós, and Clementina.
- Mart'nália. Singer and composer. Her name is referential to musicians in Europe and the US. Shés also the daughter of legendary samba composer and singer Martinho da Vila.
- Paulo Barros. carnivalesque. Paulo designs, and conceives the motive that will distinguish Unidos da Tijuca Samba School during the carnival. He organizes all creative aspects of parade and takes either credit fall for the success or failure of the escola. In the three years that Paulo has been leading Unidos da Tijuca he has transform carnival. In many ways, Paulo Barros is consider a revolutionary.
- Teresa Cristina. Singer. A true Carioca, "one that will sing with her eyes closed in front of a wild loving audience in the night clubs of Rio de Janeiro were everything smells of Samba and Cachaça".
- Mãe Helena D'oxsse. Priestess in the Umbanda tradition. She introduces samba in her extreme religious practices. Mãe lives in one of the poorest suburbs of Rio de Janeiro were she entertains lowlife and working class followers of Umbanda and Candomblé.
Festivals
- Toulouse Latin American Film Festival 2008
- Rio International Film Festival 2006
- Chicago Latino Film Festival
- Buenos Aires International Film Festival 2007
- Toronto Latino Film Festival 2007
References
External links