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6.8/10
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Iremar works at the rodeo in North East of Brazil. From his home, the truck used to transport the animals, he dreams of a future in the region's booming clothing industry.Iremar works at the rodeo in North East of Brazil. From his home, the truck used to transport the animals, he dreams of a future in the region's booming clothing industry.Iremar works at the rodeo in North East of Brazil. From his home, the truck used to transport the animals, he dreams of a future in the region's booming clothing industry.
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A very naturalistic approach, an honest eye, nothing feels enhanced, curated or manipulated, although it surely has, it's a movie. But the impression is that of a fly on the wall camera shooting some sort of South-American road movie and it's of course very fresh because we rarely get to see that kind of life, landscape, culture, even people. It took me a while to understand the concept of the rodeo here because it's so wildly different from US ones, these bulls barely look like bulls and the purpose is to grab them by the tail and make them fall down. Crazy right? It took me a while to understand the first scene, where he dusts the bull's tail.
So nothing is censored and we get a lot of profanity, nudity, abuse and even child abuse, rough living, a hard life that these guys don't complain that much about. They want more money to do or get other stuff, but the odd thing about it is that at least Iremar seems to enjoy what he does for a living, or at least not to be bothered by it. He doesn't hide or block the other side of him. He just lives his life.
It's a fine movie for the above reasons and if that sounds interesting go ahead. It didn't blow my mind as some said it would, it didn't even rock my evening and it was difficult to find but I personally don't regret seeing it. I appreciate the otherness of this movie. But it didn't do it for me.
So nothing is censored and we get a lot of profanity, nudity, abuse and even child abuse, rough living, a hard life that these guys don't complain that much about. They want more money to do or get other stuff, but the odd thing about it is that at least Iremar seems to enjoy what he does for a living, or at least not to be bothered by it. He doesn't hide or block the other side of him. He just lives his life.
It's a fine movie for the above reasons and if that sounds interesting go ahead. It didn't blow my mind as some said it would, it didn't even rock my evening and it was difficult to find but I personally don't regret seeing it. I appreciate the otherness of this movie. But it didn't do it for me.
Beautiful film, thoughtful, intriguing with wonderful cinematography and performances and some great, inventive well-written scenes, definitely worth watching.
But: Do not watch if you cannot see animal cruelty depicted.
No idea what obscenely cruel humans invented and still perpetuate this absolutely horrible bull sport depicted in the film, some have tried to ban it but been overruled by 'cultural' exceptions' -culture should not excuse it- it is horrifying.
When the programme of 2015's London Film Festival described 'Neon Bull' as containing "scenes of sexual frankness" I didn't expect one of them to feature a man masturbating a horse! But such is the world of South American rodeos as featured in this Brazilian/Uruguayan/Dutch co-production.
The film follows a group who transport unfortunate bulls from rodeo to rodeo. Galega is the driver, mother to annoying young daughter Cacá and occasional dancer for men who like to see women in sparkly costumes and horses-head masks (a niche market, I should think). Those costumes are made by Iremar, who also manhandles the bulls before they're sent into the arena, but who dreams of being instead a tailor in a clothing factory. There's also Zé, a fat buffoon of a man who serves as the film's comedy relief, and Júnior, who like Iremar is not the traditional macho stereotype of the South American male - he hauls bulls with the best of them, but then spends hours in front of the mirror fixing his hair. There's no central plot line as such; instead the film follows the characters through their daily lives, including one or two dramatic set-pieces such as the incident with the horse, and then ends.
This is not a film for prudes: sequences such as the horse incident, and a lengthy sex scene involving a heavily-pregnant woman, ensure that. Nor is it a film for those concerned with animal welfare: there are several distressing shots of the bulls being pulled to the ground as horseriders yank their tails, and the film opens with a shot of the bulls crammed so tightly into their pen that the head of one is being crushed beneath the flanks of another. I very much hope that these scenes were not enacted simply for the film but were filmed at actual rodeos, although that itself would be bad enough: in life as in art, animals should not suffer for human entertainment.
The film follows a group who transport unfortunate bulls from rodeo to rodeo. Galega is the driver, mother to annoying young daughter Cacá and occasional dancer for men who like to see women in sparkly costumes and horses-head masks (a niche market, I should think). Those costumes are made by Iremar, who also manhandles the bulls before they're sent into the arena, but who dreams of being instead a tailor in a clothing factory. There's also Zé, a fat buffoon of a man who serves as the film's comedy relief, and Júnior, who like Iremar is not the traditional macho stereotype of the South American male - he hauls bulls with the best of them, but then spends hours in front of the mirror fixing his hair. There's no central plot line as such; instead the film follows the characters through their daily lives, including one or two dramatic set-pieces such as the incident with the horse, and then ends.
This is not a film for prudes: sequences such as the horse incident, and a lengthy sex scene involving a heavily-pregnant woman, ensure that. Nor is it a film for those concerned with animal welfare: there are several distressing shots of the bulls being pulled to the ground as horseriders yank their tails, and the film opens with a shot of the bulls crammed so tightly into their pen that the head of one is being crushed beneath the flanks of another. I very much hope that these scenes were not enacted simply for the film but were filmed at actual rodeos, although that itself would be bad enough: in life as in art, animals should not suffer for human entertainment.
I don't know if this is allowed but here goes. I see a lot of movies and submit a review for most of them. I really didn't know how to describe neon bull so I didn't review it. I just wanted to say that the review by eurogary (see above) says pretty much what I was thinking but couldn't manage to put down on paper, so to speak. a cowboy's journey through a few days of his life. it is really a very good movie and unusual. one thing I would point out is that even in eastern brazil, where there doesn't seem to be a lot going on, web addresses appear on most of the advertising signs filmed. it is a small world after all. and yes indeed, this is not a movie for prudes.
Well, this is certainly something different. I can't think what the last Brazilian film was I saw but it was certainly nothing like this. Set in rural Brazil this colourful little piece depicts a group taking a number of bulls on the road to participate in a series of rodeos. The whole thing is mind boggling, the show itself seems only to consist of two horseman trapping one of the bulls between them and then competing to turn the animal over by pulling its tale. Along the way we get a prize bull being masturbated in an attempt to steal its semen and an explicit sex scene wth a beautiful and heavily pregnant lady security guard cum seller of perfume to those labouring amidst all the muck. There is charm and interest plus a little humour and some glorious photography though very little narrative as such.
Did you know
- TriviaFor the role of Geise, director Gabriel Mascaro wanted a woman who was about eight months pregnant. So for the auditions they were called actresses who were already expectant and who would reach eight months pregnant during the shoot.
- ConnectionsReferenced in La voix humaine (2020)
- SoundtracksPonto Final
Written by Raimundo Nonato da Costa, Raimundo Nonato Neto
Performed by Os Nonatos
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
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- Language
- Also known as
- Neon Bull
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $26,734
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $6,413
- Apr 10, 2016
- Gross worldwide
- $173,219
- Runtime
- 1h 41m(101 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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