Zuzu Angel
- 2006
- 1h 48min
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBased on the true story of Zuzu Angel, a famous Brazilian fashion designer in the 70's, who searches for her son Stuart, a member of a leftist university group who suddenly disappears during... Tout lireBased on the true story of Zuzu Angel, a famous Brazilian fashion designer in the 70's, who searches for her son Stuart, a member of a leftist university group who suddenly disappears during the darkest era of Brazilian military regime and media censorship.Based on the true story of Zuzu Angel, a famous Brazilian fashion designer in the 70's, who searches for her son Stuart, a member of a leftist university group who suddenly disappears during the darkest era of Brazilian military regime and media censorship.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 7 victoires et 29 nominations au total
Avis à la une
It's an excellent movie that shows a really ugly part of Brazilian history.
Patricia Pillar and Daniel Oliveira were excellent on the movie. (and the whole cast)
Every Brazilian should watch it!!!
Director Sérgio Rezende has a coherent oeuvre mainly dedicated to depict iconic figures in Brazilian political history, from congressman/vigilante/killer Tenório Cavalcanti ("O Homem da Capa Preta", 1986), to the persecution and assassination of left-wing urban guerrilla leader Carlos Lamarca by the military regime in the 1970s ("Lamarca", 1994), to the massacre of religious leader Antonio Conselheiro and his 25,000 followers by government troops in 1897 ("Canudos", 1997), and the rise and fall of Brazil's greatest 19th century entrepreneur, Barão de Mauá, who tried to foster Brazilian economical independence, confronting and, of course, ultimately beaten by huge international financial interests ("Mauá: O Imperador e o Rei", 1999). Though in all these films -- as in "Zuzu Angel" -- the subject, the historical moment and the political implications are far more riveting than Rezende's predictable, conservative treatment, they remain nonetheless valid initiatives to bring fictionalized versions of Brazilian history to the average movie audience.
Rezende still struggles with his usual shortcomings: cliché script structure, underdevelopment of characters (all of them, except for Zuzu), uninspired dialog; his camera is too precious and well-behaved (the torture scenes don't have the slightest impact, they're are moody and well-lit instead of horrifying). His direction of actors is loose and underachieved: most of the cast is wasted, miscast or misdirected. Luana Piovani is (as usual) an embarrassment, Elke Maravilha's scene is cringe-worthy, veterans like Othon Bastos, Angela Leal or Angela Vieira are wasted (the exception is Nelson Dantas' great cameo), Daniel de Oliveira (who plays the important part of Zuzu's son Stuart) and Leandra Leal are mechanical and unsatisfactory, while Flávio Bauraqui and Aramis Trindade, as the baddies, are hammy to the point of caricature. Rezende's cinema lacks thrill, risk, boldness, essential qualities in a filmmaker dedicated to such electrifying political themes.
However, "Zuzu Angel" still has considerable assets: first of all the real story of a successful, apolitical middle-class woman who, only through her tragic son's assassination and the disappearance of his corpse, developed political conscience and the strength to fight the autocratic regime, albeit taking self-immolating, strategically naive steps. Patrícia Pillar's performance as Zuzu is a wonder considering how little the script gave her: it's mature, intelligent and carefully conceived, and if it lacks greater contrast and tragic transcendence it's not her fault. Marcos Flaksman's art direction is flawless: the cars, sets, props take you right back to the early 1970s. Pedro Farka's cinematography is too "beautiful" for such a rough theme, but if it fails in thrilling power it succeeds in the "postcard" shots of Rio and Zuzu's fashion creations, meticulously recovered by costume designer Kika Lopes. The closing credit song "Angélica", written shortly after Zuzu's death by her friend Chico Buarque, is hauntingly effective.
"Zuzu Angel" joins other recent Brazilian films ("Que é Isso Companheiro?", "Quase Dois Irmãos", "Cabra Cega", "Ação entre Amigos", "O Olho do Furacão" etc) in the reassessment of the deeply traumatic Brazilian military regime that lasted from 1964 to 1985, with multi-fold consequences through this day. "Zuzu Angel" -- though flawed in many ways -- is a sincere, committed effort by a coherent, honest filmmaker. If it doesn't thrill hearts and minds as it should, it's nonetheless better and more important than the many idiotic romantic comedies and soap-opera rip-offs that galore in contemporary Brazilian film-making.
This movie, unfortunately, sinks right at the beginning. A deeply moving story, with the twists and turns of a Hollywood script, but based on real events, became worthy of an early afternoon soap opera.
Everything is obvious and explained word by word to the audience - Nothing is left to imagination, because characters are as cliché as cliché goes. The director tried to be creative by making liberal use of flashbacks, but that does not change the general pace dictated by a conservative and uninspired script.
The best is Patricia Pillar's performance, because she acts well even when everything is against her, and her natural beauty is enhanced by the awesome clothes she wears - a necessity, considering Zuzu Angel was a clothes designer.
In short... don't bother. Watch it on video, while in bed with the flu, and just because you can't take comedies anymore.
It's not an all perfect movie, but it's reliable, not unfair to the historical facts and the acting is excellent. Made for the masses? Yes. But movies are made to the great public and must be enjoyable. I think every Brazilian should watch. It reminds me Antigone, specially the court scene. No matter what are the laws of a country, the family has the right and the obligation to give rest to their beloved kin.
Patricia Pillar and Daniel Oliveira are great actors.
Why this movie is so terrible, boring, dull? There are a lot of reasons:
Firs of all, Sérgio Rezende is a bad director and should think as quick as possible in the end of his career! The screenplay is risible.
The writers create a kind of "Smith Agent" (the bad guy of Matrix) in the movie, that is responsible for all of the tragedies that happen in the story! The soundtrack...no comments! Please, don't watch ZUZU ANGEl and don't lose your time with it.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFinal film of Nelson Dantas.
- Citations
Zuzu Angel: [from trailer] Contempt is to forbid the sacred right of a mother to bury her son!
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Зузу Анжел
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 48 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1