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IMDbPro

Brava Gente Brasileira

  • 2000
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
335
YOUR RATING
Brava Gente Brasileira (2000)
DramaWar

A young Portuguese cartographer in the 18th century finds new forms of love, war and a wild new world in an expedition into South American heart.A young Portuguese cartographer in the 18th century finds new forms of love, war and a wild new world in an expedition into South American heart.A young Portuguese cartographer in the 18th century finds new forms of love, war and a wild new world in an expedition into South American heart.

  • Director
    • Lúcia Murat
  • Writer
    • Lúcia Murat
  • Stars
    • Diogo Infante
    • Floriano Peixoto
    • Luciana Rigueira
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    335
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lúcia Murat
    • Writer
      • Lúcia Murat
    • Stars
      • Diogo Infante
      • Floriano Peixoto
      • Luciana Rigueira
    • 3User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos

    Top cast18

    Edit
    Diogo Infante
    Diogo Infante
    • Diogo de Castro e Albuquerque
    Floriano Peixoto
    Floriano Peixoto
    • Capitão Pedro
    Luciana Rigueira
    • Ánote
    Leonardo Villar
    Leonardo Villar
    • Comandante
    Buza Ferraz
    Buza Ferraz
    • Antônio
    Murilo Grossi
    • Alfonso (Spanish priest)
    Sérgio Mamberti
    • Priest
    Adeílson Silva
    • Januya
    Hilário Silva
    • Chefe Kadiwéu
    Vanessa Marcelino
    • Anoã
    Sandra Silva
    • Anoã's mother
    William Soares
    • Anoã's father
    Vânia Matchua Leite
    • Comandante's wife
    Edna Marcelino
    • Anoã's sister
    Alvanir Matchua
    • Young warrior
    Aracy Matchua
    • Ánote's relative
    Lair da Silva
    • Woman with the book
    Silvana da Silva
    • Crying woman
    • Director
      • Lúcia Murat
    • Writer
      • Lúcia Murat
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews3

    6.8335
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    Featured reviews

    9dmeltz

    an anti-epic

    I just saw this film at the 2002 Latino Film Festival in the Bay Area

    Director Lucia Murat was in attendance and made some comments after the film, among which were that this film is "not an epic...it's an anti-epic". I think this gets it about right. Beautifully filmed, this story is loosely based on historical facts; but very tightly structured around anthropological research into the Guaicuru, a people who once lived in Brazil's Mato Grosso state. The actors portraying the Guaicuru are all modern Kadiweu villagers, descendants of the Guaicuru. The Kadiweu number less than 1000 today, and, according to Murat, face a very uncertain future. Problems of alienation and alcoholism as well as pervasive racism combine to severely limit the horizon of these people of ancient lineage. The film does not portray them as 100% "noble" though we are in no doubt about where our sympathies are to lie. The device of tricking the audience into associating with the Portuguese colonizers is a very effective means to setting up the final climax. Even though the historical events upon which the film are based took place in 1778, Kadiweu elders still have an oral history of them, and this is the basis for the film. How often our histories are written only by the European conquerers. Even though Murat is a white Brazilian, she has done the near impossible--found a bit of living memory of the distant past, and dramatized it to perfection. There is little if any precedent for a film like this, anywhere. Interesting to note is that the Kadiweu people were extensively documented by Claude Lévi-Strauss in his landmark book "Tristes Tropiques" where he said that he thought he would be the last European to see them, as they were clearly headeded for extinction. (Among other things, the women limit themselves to one child, so there is a natural tendency towards decrease in their population. However, since they kidnap children from other tribes their numbers have not declined as much as statistics and Lévi-Strauss predicted.) If you have ever read "Tristes Tropiques" then you will be grateful for this opportunity to travel into the world he documented in the 1930s, and to see how it has survived into today. Dramatized as high art, we also get historical and anthropological research into the origins of not only the Brazilian state, but also by implication of the entire colonial enterprise across many countries and cultures. The artistic choice of not subtitling the Kadiweu dialog contributes to our inevitable association with...ourselves...the descendants of the colonizers. Murat stated that to subtitle the Kadiweu dialog would be forcing an interpretation onto their language...as it is, their language functions musically (amid a backdrop of lush soundscape which for me was one of the highlights of the film) and allows us to feel some of the utter strangeness of the early European experience in the colonial world, while preserving the dignity of the Kadiweu. This film deserves to be seen and I am certain that it will be studied and viewed 50 and 100 years from now, unlike 99% of the other films released in the world today.
    8mgbruzon

    How South America's "West Was Won

    Finally, a South American Western showing the cruel realities of how its West was won. In this case, the film highlights how the Portuguese pushed further west into erstwhile Spanish lands to expand Brazil beyond the Line of Demarcation between Spanish and Portuguese America established by the Pope. The action takes place at the close of the 18th Century. Portuguese nobles, Brazilian-born Creoles (including the New Christians (Converted Jews sent to Brazil to populate the colony), and the Catholic clergy conspired to virtually wipe out Indian tribes, while "Westernizing" the landscape. It's an interesting history lesson, and an entertaining film. It features beautiful landscapes, and a supporting cast composed of many of the surviving "Indians" from the area. Unusual and worth a look.

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    Storyline

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    • Connections
      Spin-off A Nação Que Não Esperou Por Deus: The Nation That Didn't Wait for God (2015)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 19, 2001 (Brazil)
    • Countries of origin
      • Brazil
      • Portugal
    • Language
      • Portuguese
    • Also known as
      • Brave New Land
    • Production companies
      • BigDeni Filmes
      • Costa do Castelo Filmes
      • Quanta Centro de Produções Cinematográficas
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 44 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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