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The Cinemateca Brasileira is the institution responsible for preserving Brazilian audiovisual production. In July 2021, it experienced a major fire. Since 1940, it has been developing activities around the dissemination and restoration of its collection, with around 250 thousand rolls of films and more than one million documents related to cinema.
Another way Brazil and America had similar aspects in their films is the idea of "blackface" in America, and the "redface" in Brazil. At the end of World War One, silent Brazilian cinema moved to the growing expansion of women and their social class, mainly the middle, and shows their modernization and diversification.
A list of films produced in Brazil ordered by year and split onto separate pages by decade. For an alphabetical list of films currently on Wikipedia see Category:Brazilian films 1897–1919
Actor Fernanda Torres' Oscar nomination for "I'm Still Here" continues a family legacy. The actor’s mother, Fernanda Montenegro, who also stars in “I’m Still Here,” received an Oscar ...
Twenty Years Later (Portuguese: Cabra Marcado para Morrer, lit. 'A Man Marked for Death') is a 1984 Brazilian documentary film directed by Eduardo Coutinho. It originated in 1964 as a planned feature film about the life and death of João Pedro Teixeira, a leader of the Peasant leagues from Paraíba who was assassinated on the order of local landowners in 1962.
The House of Sand (Portuguese: Casa de Areia) is a 2005 Brazilian film directed by Andrucha Waddington. It stars real life mother and daughter Fernanda Montenegro and Fernanda Torres . The House of Sand was filmed entirely on the coast of northern Brazil, inside Lençóis Maranhenses National Park .
Carnaval is a 2021 Brazilian comedy film directed by Leandro Neri , written by Peu Barbalho, Audemir Leuzinger, Luisa Mascarenhas and Leandro Neri and starring Lipy Adler, Nikolas Antunes and Giovana Cordeiro. [1] The film was digitally released on June 2, 2021, by Netflix. [2]
This poll was the basis for a book named The 100 Best Brazilian Films, published in 2016. [2] The idea of the ranking and the book was suggested by publisher Letramento, with whom Abraccine and television network Canal Brasil co-released the book. The ranking was done based on individual lists done by Abraccine's 100 critics, who initially ...