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Nascidos nos Bordéis

Título original: Born Into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids
  • 2004
  • 12
  • 1 h 25 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,2/10
18 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Nascidos nos Bordéis (2004)
Home Video Trailer from Think Film, Inc
Reproduzir trailer2:32
1 vídeo
38 fotos
NotíciasBiografiaDocumentário

Dois documentaristas narram seu tempo em Sonagchi, no bairro de Calcutá na Índia, e os relacionamentos que desenvolveram com filhos de prostitutas que trabalham no conhecido distrito da luz ... Ler tudoDois documentaristas narram seu tempo em Sonagchi, no bairro de Calcutá na Índia, e os relacionamentos que desenvolveram com filhos de prostitutas que trabalham no conhecido distrito da luz vermelha da cidade.Dois documentaristas narram seu tempo em Sonagchi, no bairro de Calcutá na Índia, e os relacionamentos que desenvolveram com filhos de prostitutas que trabalham no conhecido distrito da luz vermelha da cidade.

  • Direção
    • Zana Briski
    • Ross Kauffman
  • Roteiristas
    • Zana Briski
    • Ross Kauffman
  • Artistas
    • Kochi
    • Avijit Halder
    • Shanti Das
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,2/10
    18 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Zana Briski
      • Ross Kauffman
    • Roteiristas
      • Zana Briski
      • Ross Kauffman
    • Artistas
      • Kochi
      • Avijit Halder
      • Shanti Das
    • 116Avaliações de usuários
    • 69Avaliações da crítica
    • 78Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 1 Oscar
      • 21 vitórias e 5 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Born Into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids
    Trailer 2:32
    Born Into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids

    Fotos38

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
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    Ver pôster
    + 32
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal11

    Editar
    Kochi
    Avijit Halder
      Shanti Das
        Manik
        Puja Mukerjee
          Gour
          Suchitra
          Tapasi
          Mamuni
          Zana Briski
          Zana Briski
          • Self "Zana Auntie"
          • (não creditado)
          Sunil Halder
          • Self
          • (não creditado)
          • …
          • Direção
            • Zana Briski
            • Ross Kauffman
          • Roteiristas
            • Zana Briski
            • Ross Kauffman
          • Elenco e equipe completos
          • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

          Avaliações de usuários116

          7,218.4K
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          Avaliações em destaque

          9ncbrian

          Documentary at its best

          I often disagree with the academy award nominations. It's usually too political to nominate the best movies and performances of the year. Born Into Brothels is an exception, it was nominated and won! The only mistake was not nominating it for best picture.

          Brothels is the story of a woman, Zana Briski, who traveled to Calcutta to photograph the brothels. She fell in love with the children and began teaching them photography. The movie is seen through their eyes.

          The result is extraordinary in so many ways. Calcutta's red light district is interesting in and of itself. The setting is the first extraordinary feature. The filming makes you feel like you are there. Director Ross Kauffman captures the feeling of being trapped in dark allies with a dark future. Without a director commentary running though the film, you're able to see it all by the way it's been directed. The dark past and future of these families is presented in a beautiful and horrific way.

          Secondly, the children are lovable. The story focuses on 8 or 9 children of prostitutes. Each one is unique. Some are incredibly funny, others serious, some are troubled, and at least one has an undeniable talent for photography. You'll leave the theater feeling like you know them.

          This is documentary film at its best. It transports us to another country and makes us love the troubled children. What was troubling to me was having to leave the theater never to see these troubled children again. Putting aside the incredible movie-making abilities of these creators, Zana Briski is a true hero.
          10Dilip

          Don't miss this inspiring jewel of a film that concretely gives hope and shows us life through the photography and vivacity of children, and shows what a huge difference one person can make. 10 out of 10 st

          Today I saw "Born into Brothels" at day 3 of 4 of the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. Even with another day left, I have some confidence that this will be the film I most appreciated seeing at this festival, and in fact is one of the most inspiring films I have seen in a long time. Directors and producers Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman also hosted a question and answer session after the film, and I had the privilege of meeting and talking with Zana Briski, whose intimate involvement in this film and her selfless efforts have given me tremendous admiration for what she does; as I said in the Q&A period, if we had a few more people like her, the world would be a vastly better place for all of us.

          Ms. Briski is an established photographer and now first time director who began in 1997 to explore the lives of sex workers in Calcutta's red-light district, Sonagachi, where over 7000 women and (disgustingly sadly) girls are prostitutes. In order to better understand them, Zana lived for months at a time with them, and the children quickly befriended her. The children were curious to try their hands at taking pictures, and Zana helped to empower them and see the world through their eyes by teaching them photography and acquiring point-and-shoot 35mm film cameras for them, as well as helping them to critique and edit their pictures.

          The resulting pictures that the children took between the years 2000 and 2003 are striking. Some of the children clearly have innate talent in composition and artistry (see, for example, shot 17 "Girl on a Roof" or 14 "Horse", at the Kids with Cameras site mentioned at the bottom of my review), and all of them have works portraying the vitality of life so much so that Zana helped get one child invited to be part of a children's jury at a World Press Photo Foundation photo exhibit in Amsterdam in 2002, and for him to actually attend.

          Zana admits in the film that she is not a social worker, but wanted very much to help the boys and girls, for otherwise their future was a dismal one lacking hope beyond prostitution, drugs, pimping, and crime. She organized a photo exhibit in a Calcutta bookstore, garnering Zana's project and the individual children television and newspaper coverage. Zana has recently set up an organization, Kids with Cameras, that sells their prints to raise money for them, with 100% of the profits going to them. Twelve of these prints were the ones chosen for the 2003 "Amnesty International" calendar, and she even exhibited and auctioned the children's work at Sotheby's. She has helped to get several of the children into good boarding schools and recently helped a few to get email access and English lessons.

          The film itself is technically beautiful, with a melange of colors, sounds, and activity, centered on the children but also including others. The filmmakers in no way hide the unsavory life in Sonagachi, including disturbing cursing against the children, hopelessness of being able to in any way be involved in normal society, having no governmental support, facing tremendous bureaucracy to get anything changed even with Ms. Briski's help, and the total lack of police investigation or protection as painfully brought to light when one child's mother is killed by a pimp in a "kitchen fire". In making the film, Mr. Kauffman and Ms. Briski effectively used fast camera pans, red overtints, and grainy film at times to portray an environment where participants would not want to be carefully filmed. They could have made this a sad and detailed documentary about this red light slum, but instead chose to recognize its nature but focus on the innocence of the children and hope that could be offered them.

          If you have the opportunity to see this film at a festival, don't miss it. I understand that HBO/Cinemax may be distributing the film as well to afford a much wider audience. It is a heartwarming film that left me with a jumble of emotions - hopefulness and hopelessness; incredulity and shock at human nature combined with tremendous admiration at the selflessness and difference that one person can make; sadness at the overwhelming poverty, filth, and insouciance of a society that lets a community like Songagachi exist and yet tremendous happiness at the children's glee in living their lives with innocent play and their ambition to move out of the community. For the quality and uniqueness of the film, as well as the tremendous service that Zana Briski portrays, this film gets 10 stars out of 10 in my book. Don't miss this jewel of a film - and consider supporting the work that goes on.

          --Dilip Barman April 3, 2004
          7kurtz-1

          An incredible and meaningful experience

          This film should be seen by everyone who has any sense of what the world is and can be if we give our attention and empathy to make it a better place --in the background I hear the greed and anger of Donald Trump and it is so jarring (and sad) and disturbing ....it is absolutely amazing the dedication and caring of Zana Briski an Ross Kauffman and their attempt to support and change the destinies of these poor unfortunate children who are doomed to a life of humiliation, poverty and human degradation. It is uplifting to know that there are people who care --who are not driven by greed and avarice-- who will try , no matter what the odds are, no matter what are the bureaucratic difficulties to help and support these poor unfortunate children .. I know that I have been immensely moved by this film and what is going on in a place like the red light district of Calcutta and will do what I can to make some impact with these unfortunate children in all of the various venues that these people have chosen to work in and do these miraculous things that are they are doing.
          8jotix100

          Oh Calcutta!

          The film makers of this documentary take the viewer into areas that would have been off limits to anyone wanting to explore the life of the children of some Calcutta prostitutes. About ten children are showcased in the film as one of the directors of the documentary, Zana Briski, involves the children in something positive as she teaches them how to use the camera in capturing the world around them.

          In gaining the children's confidence, they, in turn, tell us about how they see life in that hostile environment. Most of the girls shown in the film would probably end up in the same situation their mothers went through, as it appears life for them is a vicious circle in which there is no escape. For the boys, in spite of the natural talent shown as they take pictures, the mean streets of Calcutta don't promise much either.

          As a documentary, Ms. Briski and Mr. Kauffman, show us how they were able to give the children a different way to look at life, but one wonders what has happened after they finished their work. Are these young girls and boys better off because this experience, or did they go back to the only way of life they knew about?

          "Born into Brothels" is a sad commentary on our society at large, because where there is poverty, as it's the case in Calcutta, women will resort into the kind of life where they can get by without any education or skills. These women are actually the victims of a system that penalizes them for just being in the wrong place, at the wrong time.

          Let's hope Ms. Briski and Mr. Kaufamn were able to instill in these young girls and boys the idea of looking for something better in their lives if they escape the poor surroundings in which they were born into.
          10rgwright1

          Deeply compelling personal film

          This is a beautifully conceived and directed film. I knew little about the red light district of Calcutta and certainly nothing of the amazing children whose photographs are not only dramatic but also a tool of empowerment, albeit not entirely successful. One of the best documentaries of 2004. There certainly have been several excellent movies about the misery and hopeless nature of life in red light districts throughout the world, particularly southeast Asia. But this film's decision to focus on the children who not only are born in the brothels, but essentially live their entire lives within this damp and dismal walls. Director/photographer Zana Briski is to commended for bringing this to light. Several of my friends had deep empathy for her frustrating experiences with the Indian bureaucracy as she tries to get the children's art work noticed. Great film.

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          Interesses relacionados

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          Notícias
          Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
          Biografia
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          Documentário

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          • Citações

            Avjit: There is nothing called hope in my future.

          • Conexões
            Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Constantine/Son of the Mask/Because of Winn-Dixie/Born Into Brothels (2005)
          • Trilhas sonoras
            Sankarabaranam pancha nadai pallavi
            Performed by Shenkar and The Epidemics

          Principais escolhas

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          Perguntas frequentes19

          • How long is Born Into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids?Fornecido pela Alexa
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          Detalhes

          Editar
          • Data de lançamento
            • 11 de março de 2005 (Estados Unidos da América)
          • País de origem
            • Estados Unidos da América
          • Central de atendimento oficial
            • Official site
          • Idiomas
            • Bengalês
            • Inglês
          • Também conhecido como
            • Born Into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids
          • Locações de filme
            • Calcutá, Bengala Ocidental, Índia
          • Empresas de produção
            • Red Light Films
            • HBO/Cinemax Documentary
            • Creative Visions
          • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

          Bilheteria

          Editar
          • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
            • US$ 3.515.061
          • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
            • US$ 14.605
            • 12 de dez. de 2004
          • Faturamento bruto mundial
            • US$ 3.529.201
          Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

          Especificações técnicas

          Editar
          • Tempo de duração
            • 1 h 25 min(85 min)
          • Cor
            • Color
          • Mixagem de som
            • Dolby Digital
          • Proporção
            • 1.37 : 1(original negative)
            • 1.85 : 1

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