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IMDbPro

Le Dieu noir et le diable blond

Original title: Deus e o Diabo na Terra do Sol
  • 1964
  • Not Rated
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
6K
YOUR RATING
Le Dieu noir et le diable blond (1964)
AdventureCrimeDramaWestern

After killing his employer when he tries to cheat him out of his payment, a man becomes an outlaw and starts following a self-proclaimed saint.After killing his employer when he tries to cheat him out of his payment, a man becomes an outlaw and starts following a self-proclaimed saint.After killing his employer when he tries to cheat him out of his payment, a man becomes an outlaw and starts following a self-proclaimed saint.

  • Director
    • Glauber Rocha
  • Writers
    • Walter Lima Jr.
    • Glauber Rocha
    • Paulo Gil Soares
  • Stars
    • Geraldo Del Rey
    • Yoná Magalhães
    • Othon Bastos
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Glauber Rocha
    • Writers
      • Walter Lima Jr.
      • Glauber Rocha
      • Paulo Gil Soares
    • Stars
      • Geraldo Del Rey
      • Yoná Magalhães
      • Othon Bastos
    • 23User reviews
    • 37Critic reviews
    • 74Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos62

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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Geraldo Del Rey
    Geraldo Del Rey
    • Manuel
    Yoná Magalhães
    Yoná Magalhães
    • Rosa
    Othon Bastos
    Othon Bastos
    • Corisco
    Maurício do Valle
    • Antônio das Mortes
    Lidio Silva
    • Sebastião
    Sonia Dos Humildes
    • Dadá
    João Gama
    • Priest
    Antônio Pinto
    • Colonel
    Milton Rosa
    • Moraes
    • (as Milton Roda)
    Roque Santos
      Billy Davis
        Mário Gusmão
          Marrom
          • Cego Júlio
          • (uncredited)
          Maria Olívia Rebouças
            Regina Rosenburgo
              • Director
                • Glauber Rocha
              • Writers
                • Walter Lima Jr.
                • Glauber Rocha
                • Paulo Gil Soares
              • All cast & crew
              • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

              User reviews23

              7.16K
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              Featured reviews

              cybermorphy

              A great piece of art

              Deus e o Diabo na Terra do Sol isn't just a good Brazilian movie. This is an actual masterpiece, compared to the big ones in the history of cinema. It's not a boring and too regional film, but deals with universal aspects of human nature, such as blind devotion, love, hate, and all kinds of misery. Glauber Rocha, with only 22 years, made a mix of Eisenstein, Italian neo-realism and nouvelle-vague, under a background of cordel literature (our pulp fictions). The Mauricio do Valle character, Antonio das Mortes, is fundamentally a European western anti-hero, and certainly inspired Leone, Corbucci and others in the development of their scripts. The soundtrack, with Villa Lobbos and Rocha&Ricardo songs, matches perfectly with the dry landscape of the Brazilian Northeast. In short, Deus e o Diabo na Terra do Sol must be known. If you have open mind and like great cinema, and not just the popcorn no-brain north-American blockbusters, try this one.
              4Daniel Karlsson

              Not worth watching

              I saw this film on the premise of that it according to critics is the "best Brazilian film of all times". Critics are way too generous to this young auteur influenced by Eisenstein and other masters, mixing genres and styles but only achieving an amateurish, confused, pretentious and quite tasteless work. It is messy, low-budget and is overall not worth watching despite a handful of nice shots and moments. In an accompanying interview to the film, the director Rocha, with Marxist rhetoric, blame European colonists for Latin America's economic problems and justifies the movie's content as "the aesthetics of hunger". To me, more than anything else, it shows the madness of religion and cults and how they attract people in desperation.
              6frankenbenz

              One more for the bandwagon

              Like Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto, Deus e O Diabo Na Terra Do Sol, (translated: God and the Devil in Land of Sun) doesn't bother mincing words when addressing what's wrong with the world. As Communism swept through South America and Cuba in the 50's and 60's, Socialist film-making enjoyed its greatest hey dey and, amongst those films, DeODNTDS is remembered as one of the best. Whereas films like Mikhail Kalatozov's I Am Cuba were unabashed agents of propaganda, bashing Capitalism with a hammer-like heavy hand, Glauber Rocha's efforts were hidden behind the symbolism of one man's Chaucer-esque journey into an unknown fate.

              The journey is Manuel's, an impoverished farmer who is radicalized after killing his boss who (like evil capitalists do) attempted to cheat Manuel of his wages. Manuel then finds God, in the form of a self-proclaimed Saint named Sebastian. Before long, Sebastian's blood thirsty spell over Manuel is broken by Rosa, Manuel's dutiful (and long-suffering) wife. But soon after they're free from Sebastian's grip, Manuel is seduced by the charms of a charismatic and similarly blood thirsty bandit named Corisco. Such is the way with Manuel, doomed to follow, and it is this theme that strangles the life out of Rocha's film.

              DeODNTDS is a scathing indictment of not only capitalism, but also of religion and society as a whole. In this world, man is desperately out of balance with nature (and thus himself), wishing (and prophesying) for the land to turn to sea and the sea to turn to land. These fruitless dreams are a constant reminder that man must look inward, to find strength from his own heart and hands. The message is unmistakable, as stark as the black and white imagery Rocha bombards us with, but the trouble with DeODNTDS is that it makes it's point early on is compelled to repeat it over and over again, not unlike a mantra.The inevitable fate of Manuel is set up mid-way through the first act, when bounty hunter Antonio das Mortes is hired by church and city officials to kill Saint Sebastian and put an end to his proletariat uprising (which threatens the establishment aka the money making machine). But das Mortes' hunt is sidetracked and ultimately stalled to such a degree that by the time he and Manuel come face to face, no real stakes remain. In the process of pitting these two against one another, Rocha's film gets bogged down in dogmatic digressions that drag out for what feels like an eternity. By the time the credits roll, the momentum of the powerful first act is lost, and instead of challenging its audience's socio-political allegiances, Deus eO Diablo Na Terra Do Sol merely challenges you to stay awake.
              8tomgillespie2002

              Horrifying and undoubtedly important

              At just 25, Brazilian director Glauber Rocha directed Black God, White Devil, now considered one of the most important pictures to ever come out of Brazil, and a key entry into the Cinema Novo movement. Combining elements of Sergio Leone, Italian neo-realism, and Soviet propaganda such as the work of Sergei Eisenstein, Rocha created a brutal, grainy world inhabited by suicidal religious fanatics, wandering hit men, and psychopathic bandits. From the opening shots of rotting animal corpses and the endless Brazilian sertão, Rocha portrays a grim social realism, one of the key aspects of Cinema Novo.

              Ranch-hand Manuel (Geraldo Del Rey) lives in poverty with his wife Rosa (Yona Magalhaes). Fed up with his situation, he goes into town to sell his stock, only to have his boss try to cheat him out of his money, so Manuel kills him with a machete. Fleeing the authorities, he falls in with maniacal preacher Sebastiao (Lidio Silva), who leads Manuel, Rosa and his other followers on a killing spree. Circumstances lead to Manuel leaving the cause, and joining up with famous bandit Corisco (Othon Bastos), who also leads the couple on an orgy of meaningless violence and thievery. But shadowy gun-for-hire Antonio das Mortes (Mauricio do Valle), having been paid by the church and a poltician, is hot on Corisco's tail.

              The film very much reminded me of Cormac McCarthy's astounding novel Blood Meridian, where the sheer brutality of the violence played as a metaphor for a society gone sour and a world intent of self-destruction. Like Blood Meridian's The Kid, Manuel and Rosa follow blindly to whichever cause they see a glimmer of hope in. They fail to see the lunacy of Sebastiao's behaviour, and it's only at the point where he stabs a baby in the heart that their eyes seem to be opened, only for them to shack up with the gibbering Corisco, a man who speaks like a poet but doesn't seem to be able to comprehend his own existence. It is at this point, about two-thirds in, that the film seems to lose momentum and becomes somewhat of an unfathomable mess.

              But it isn't just the social-political ponderings that make Black God, White Devil so memorable, it also has style in abundance. The camera-work is shaky and urgent at times, full of character close-ups from awkward angles, but it also uses fast editing reminiscent of Eisenstein's greatest works. Similar to Battleship Potemkin's (1925) Odessa steps sequence, the Monte Santo chapel massacre at the hands of Antonio das Mortes is simply electrifying. It is das Mortes' presence that leads to the moments that evoke the work of Sergio Leone, wrapping the shady anti-hero in moody atmosphere like Clint Eastwood's Man With No Name. It's a dangerous mixture of conflicting styles that works beautifully, making the film beautiful and cool, occasionally horrifying, and undoubtedly important. It's just a shame it doesn't manage to keep up with the absolutely astonishing opening two-thirds.
              8gazineo-1

              A great masterpiece!

              This movie is considered by the critics as the most important Brazilian movie of all times. And they are right in this point. An impressive, outstanding portrait of Brazilian rich culture with a focus on some delicate subjects as religion, faith, violence and economic exploration. Rocha made here a fantastic synthesis of the main problems of Brazil, problems that still remained almost forty years after. Great performances by Del Rey and Mauricio do Valle.

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              Related interests

              Still frame
              Adventure
              James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
              Crime
              Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
              Drama
              John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in La Prisonnière du désert (1956)
              Western

              Storyline

              Edit

              Did you know

              Edit
              • Trivia
                In the scene where we see Manuel (Geraldo Del Rey) carrying a huge stone over his head while climbing Monte Santo on his knees, Del Rey insisted on carrying a real stone that weighted over 20 kilos - something that really worried director Glauber Rocha. After the shooting, Del Rey had to take 2 days off, as he wasn't in condition to show up.
              • Quotes

                Corisco: Here's my rifle to save the poor from starving.

              • Connections
                Edited into A Edição do Nordeste (2023)
              • Soundtracks
                Manuel e Rosa
                Written by Glauber Rocha & Sérgio Ricardo

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              FAQ17

              • How long is Black God, White Devil?Powered by Alexa

              Details

              Edit
              • Release date
                • October 18, 1967 (France)
              • Country of origin
                • Brazil
              • Official site
                • Mr Bongo Films
              • Language
                • Portuguese
              • Also known as
                • Black God, White Devil
              • Filming locations
                • Canudos, Bahia, Brazil
              • Production companies
                • Banco Nacional de Minas Gerais
                • Copacabana Filmes
                • Luiz Augusto Mendes Produções Cinematográficas
              • See more company credits at IMDbPro

              Box office

              Edit
              • Gross US & Canada
                • $7,826
              • Opening weekend US & Canada
                • $3,200
                • Nov 19, 2023
              • Gross worldwide
                • $7,826
              See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

              Tech specs

              Edit
              • Runtime
                • 2h(120 min)
              • Color
                • Black and White
              • Sound mix
                • Mono
              • Aspect ratio
                • 1.37 : 1

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