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La historia de la relación entre Karamakate, un chamán amazónico y último sobreviviente de su pueblo, y dos científicos que trabajan juntos durante cuarenta años para buscar en el Amazonas u... Leer todoLa historia de la relación entre Karamakate, un chamán amazónico y último sobreviviente de su pueblo, y dos científicos que trabajan juntos durante cuarenta años para buscar en el Amazonas una planta curativa sagrada.La historia de la relación entre Karamakate, un chamán amazónico y último sobreviviente de su pueblo, y dos científicos que trabajan juntos durante cuarenta años para buscar en el Amazonas una planta curativa sagrada.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
- 46 premios ganados y 32 nominaciones en total
Antonio Bolívar
- Old Karamakate
- (as Tafillama-Antonio Bolívar Salvador)
Miguel Dionisio Ramos
- Manduca
- (as Yauenkü Miguee)
Jesús Rodríguez
- Borracho Cohiuano
- (as Jesús Rodríguez)
Opiniones destacadas
Embrace of the Serpent deserves a special mention of the movies I watched at the 8th Bengaluru International Film Festival. Loved the way this movie delineates the Amazon, Culture, People, their belief, their love for the spirit called LIFE transcending from reality to fantasy effortlessly. Though its loosely based on the diaries of the 2 scientist, the movie gives a collective account of what it would have been to witness those times and see the true dark side of the Colonial enforcements and the resulting destruction of culture, people, nature on a wide range of a scale. The rich monochrome frames simply captivates ones mind and more importantly, the lack of background scores at times adds the muscle to the already strong Amazon backdrop. The forest & the river has this captivating power which sucks you into it and makes one feel as if he/she is also a part of the journey through time. Those handpicked tribal actors are out of the world truly - especially both the young and the old Karamakate - inspirational stuff. Certainly not to be missed.
Another Ciro Guerra's masterpiece. Fascinating movie. After "The wind Journeys" Guerra shows again his talent with an incredible history about the Amazonas jungle back in the early 1900s. The beauty and uniqueness of the scenes is mind blowing. The sound takes you deep inside the jungle. The story is a thriller that makes you live the most strange adventures that you could ever imagine in the jungle. It is based on two diaries written by a German and American travelers. All actors have an incredible command of the indigenous dialect. Additionally, the native indigenous actors seem to be truly professionals. Enjoyed every single minute. A must see.
A very good movie which reflects the tragic history of peoples Amazon between the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century. Us shows the messianic movements of indigenous peoples, exploitation, ill treatment and killings carried out by the rubber, the indoctrination by the missionaries, the Colombo-Peruvian war, etc. It also gives us a glimpse of the culture of these peoples, the use of powerful hallucinogens in ritual ceremonies to communicate with the spirits of nature, knowledge of the environment, importance of the river and the jungle and the anaconda and jaguars. Finally a production well documented and that through a history very well achieved introduces us to cosmology and history of the peoples Amazon.
I love how this movie is put together. By combining the accounts of two explorers - over 30 years apart - it manages to tell a story of a world changing. You can see how actions made by the first explorer directly changes the world of the people they meet. Mostly in a bad way. The movie conveys, with a sadness, how much the people of these tribes lost because of the way they were handled by "white people". But this is not the time tested "gone with the wolves"-story. It's an artistic and stylistic, yet believable, account of the old meeting the new.
One thought though: While it is an interesting discussion why it's in black and white, I think the movie would have been better off in color. At least partly. Black and white is nice, but the jungle scenery in this movie could have been breathtaking in color - but the again, maybe that's the point.
One thought though: While it is an interesting discussion why it's in black and white, I think the movie would have been better off in color. At least partly. Black and white is nice, but the jungle scenery in this movie could have been breathtaking in color - but the again, maybe that's the point.
In early 20th century, Theodor von Martius is a German ethnographer from University of Tübingen cataloging the tribes of the Amazon. He gets sick and is brought to shaman Karamakate by his native guide Manduca. Karamakate distrusts the white men who cruelly run their rubber plantations or missionaries wiping out the native culture. He believes that he's the last of his tribe until Theo tells him about an isolated group of survivors. He guides them back to his former home to find a yakruna plant. About thirty years later, Evan arrives looking for Karamakate. He tells him that Theo died later and Manduca brought his diaries back to Germany to be published. Karamakate claims to be suffering from memory loss and only a hollowed shell copy called chullachaqui.
The river journey is something like the Heart of Darkness. It portrays a harrowing vision of the struggles of the native community. It is enthralling. It is poetic. The characters are compelling. The only minor drawback is the ending which gets overextended. There is probably a quicker and more compelling way to wrap up the movie after what happened in the village. I like the surrealism in the end but it's just a little long.
The river journey is something like the Heart of Darkness. It portrays a harrowing vision of the struggles of the native community. It is enthralling. It is poetic. The characters are compelling. The only minor drawback is the ending which gets overextended. There is probably a quicker and more compelling way to wrap up the movie after what happened in the village. I like the surrealism in the end but it's just a little long.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe scene where a man is praised to be the Messiah is based on an actual event.
- Citas
Young Karamakate: Knowledge belongs to all. You do not understand that. You are just a white man.
- ConexionesFeatured in Starfilm (2017)
- Bandas sonorasEmbrace Of The Serpent
(Theme from Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
by Nascuy Linares
© 2016 Plaza Mayor Company, Ltd.
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- How long is Embrace of the Serpent?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Embrace of the Serpent
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 1,400,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 1,329,249
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 50,955
- 21 feb 2016
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 3,217,212
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 5 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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