This article examines utopian gestures and inaugural desires in two films which became symbolic of the Brazilian Film Revival in the late 1990s: Central Station (1998) and Midnight (1999). Both evolve around the idea of an overcrowded or empty centre in a country trapped between past and future, in which the motif of the zero stands for both the announcement and the negation of utopia. The analysis draws parallels between them and new wave films which also elaborate on the idea of the zero, with examples picked from Italian neo-realism, the Brazilian Cinema Novo and the New German Cinema. In Central Station, the ‘point zero’, or the core of the homeland, is retrieved in the archaic backlands, where political issues are resolved in the priva...
Walter Salles is probably the most widely known Brazilian director and producer. This article offers...
The cinema novo, an esthetic movement of Brazilian cinema from the late fifties to early sixties, ha...
To what extent does recent Brazilian cinema explore individual stories as a way to illustrate the fr...
This book studies the ressurgence of the utopian gesture in Brazilian Cinema from the mid-1990s onwa...
The chapter conducts close analysis of the film Midnight (O primeiro dia) in the light of Brazilian ...
AbstractThis article traces the emergence of a younger generation of Brazilian filmmakers whose work...
This dissertation employs a theoretical framework rooted in utopian studies to examine the role of u...
This article takes a first step towards identifying a non-Eurocentric filmphilosophy. It does so by ...
The New Brazilian Cinema (from the mid-1990s) has been celebrated as a period of re-birth for the na...
Dirigido por Walter Salles e Daniela Thomas, Terra Estrangeira (1995) mostra, a partir de trajetória...
Regarded as a landmark in Brazilian film history, Susana Amaral’s A hora da estrela/The Hour of the ...
This article focuses on how the various regions of the world think about modernity in the sense of t...
This article explores the fusion between the conventions of the documentary and fiction films in Wal...
A Fábrica de Nada (The Nothing Factory) (Pinho, 2017) tells the story of a group of workers struggl...
The article analyzes how, under the influence of nationalists and Marxists theses of the period, the...
Walter Salles is probably the most widely known Brazilian director and producer. This article offers...
The cinema novo, an esthetic movement of Brazilian cinema from the late fifties to early sixties, ha...
To what extent does recent Brazilian cinema explore individual stories as a way to illustrate the fr...
This book studies the ressurgence of the utopian gesture in Brazilian Cinema from the mid-1990s onwa...
The chapter conducts close analysis of the film Midnight (O primeiro dia) in the light of Brazilian ...
AbstractThis article traces the emergence of a younger generation of Brazilian filmmakers whose work...
This dissertation employs a theoretical framework rooted in utopian studies to examine the role of u...
This article takes a first step towards identifying a non-Eurocentric filmphilosophy. It does so by ...
The New Brazilian Cinema (from the mid-1990s) has been celebrated as a period of re-birth for the na...
Dirigido por Walter Salles e Daniela Thomas, Terra Estrangeira (1995) mostra, a partir de trajetória...
Regarded as a landmark in Brazilian film history, Susana Amaral’s A hora da estrela/The Hour of the ...
This article focuses on how the various regions of the world think about modernity in the sense of t...
This article explores the fusion between the conventions of the documentary and fiction films in Wal...
A Fábrica de Nada (The Nothing Factory) (Pinho, 2017) tells the story of a group of workers struggl...
The article analyzes how, under the influence of nationalists and Marxists theses of the period, the...
Walter Salles is probably the most widely known Brazilian director and producer. This article offers...
The cinema novo, an esthetic movement of Brazilian cinema from the late fifties to early sixties, ha...
To what extent does recent Brazilian cinema explore individual stories as a way to illustrate the fr...