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City of God
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Fernando Meirelles' City of God is a sweeping tale of how crime affects the poor population of Rio de Janeiro. Though the narrative skips around in time, the main focus is on Cabeleira who formed a gang called the Tender Trio. He and his best friend, Bené (Phelipe Haagensen), become crime lords over the course of a decade. When Bené is killed before he can retire, Lil' Zé attempts to take out his arch enemy, Sandro Cenoura (Matheus Nachtergaele). But Sandro and a young gangster named Mane form an alliance and begin a gang war with Lil' Zé. Amateur photographer Buscape (Alexandre Rodrigues) takes pictures of the brutal crime war, making their story famous. City of God was screened at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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joem18bjoem18b Put Down That Frog and Step Away
by joem18b in joem18b Blog
hasn't rated it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"Before dealing with the end of the world as we know it, which this movie does not explicitly mention but which is lurking there in the unspoken background - before dealing with that, it being a pet peeve of mine, let me mention first an equally annoying pet peeve: many podcasters, the Spout podcasters occasionally among them, use the expression "begs the question" when they actually mean "raises the question." This error of diction has become so common in the U.S. today that it's probably useless to even mention it here, but since I heard it again on FilmCouch recently, let me remind those who might be unaware of it that "begging the question" is a form of logical fallacy in which an argument is assumed to be true without evidence other than the argument itself. Thank you. Meanwhile, back in the day, if you hated documentaries but had to write a paper on one, you could head down to Ninth and Trawler and catch The Nudist Story at the Jewel Box. The Nudist Story is the film where eve ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Meirelles’ Latest Looks Familia ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Here is the new teaser trailer for Blindness, the latest film from Fernando Meirelles (City of God; The Constant Gardener). Normally I wouldn’t be so excited about something that reminds me of Val Kilmer’s post-eye-surgery point-of-view shots from At First Sight, especially when such visuals are accompanied by generic outbreak plots, but I’m so excited about Meirelles’ work that I’d have seen Alvin and the Chipmunks – poop-eating included — if he’d been behind the camera. All this despite the fact that I was extremely disappointed with The Constant Gardener the first time I watched it on account I had such high expectations. Maybe I should calm down my anticipation before Blindness hits theaters this September. Anyway, I know there are some other outbreak films coming out soon, including M. Night Shyamalan’s The Happening and the enticingly titled Zombie Strippers, but neither of them come from a Nobel Prize-winning novel, like Blindness does. Of course, the greatest novels are oft ... " [More]
dunedonkeydunedonkey One of the best films ever made.
by dunedonkey in film phlegm
loved it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"Few films that come out nowadays go the distance to include every major aspect of a great film. Not going to go into much detail regarding characters/plot. Everyone else will cover that in their reviews. PlotMany directors and screenwriters have tried to create a gang violence film depicting the lifestyles of youths engaged in these gangs. None of these films light a match to the realism portrayed in this film. Perhaps none of them have tried or meant to try. What few of them fail to depict is the difficulty of youth in being able to escape their fate as slum rats. As they are born into gangs, they fail in trying to escape it. Those that manage to escape it, never really escape. It's the vicious cycle of the rich becoming richer, and the poor becoming poorer. This film portrays it amazingly as we see the children joining these gangs becoming younger and younger. Mise-en-Scene...As much of the film takes place in the 70s, the crew does an amazing job of transporting you there. C ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Spout Mavens review - O Homem d ...
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
loved it.
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"Doing to some slight research into the most recent DVD screener I received from Spout, The Man of the Year, I felt there might be some promise. Alas, this was one of the worst I've seen in a while.I watched the trailer for the movie which was on the DVD as well after I had finished. It featured a quote from who knows where stating "If Quentin Tarantino had been Brazillian". I'm not sure what the second part of this sentence was because the trailer failed to let us know. But I tried to think of a number of possibilities. One of the simplest ones probably would have been, "he would have made a movie that looked nothing like this one." Really this movie has none of the wit or enjoyable dialogue that you would find in a Tarantino movie.For another comparison, I saw a quote from a review by Phil Villarreal from the Arizona Daily Star. He says "If 'City of God' is Brazil's answer to 'The Godfather,' then 'The Man of the Year' is Rio's 'G ... " [More]
tmoneytmoney Re: Top Five Movies with Budget ...
by tmoney in Top 5
liked it.
"Wow.  I love this movie, and it does look like a high budget film.  $3.3 mil??!! " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Top Five Movies with Budget ...
by Jymkata in Top 5
loved it.
"interesting topic, I must admit I like a lot of films with higher budgets but here is my top 5 without spending too much time looking up the numbers- 1. 12 Angry Men - $350,000 in 1957, about $ 5.6 mil. in today's dollars according to your rules. This is one of my favorite films. Yeah, the setting is a couple of rooms, but the direction is taut and wow, what a cast!2. Mad Max - est. $350,00 in 1979, about $ 2.8 mil. Amazing low budget film. They got a steal with an unknown Mel Gibson, but it's pretty gutsy to make a futuristic movie with this scale.3. City of God - This movie looks like it was made with $ 50 mil. thanks to the direction and cinematography, but can you believe it only cost Miramax $ 3.3 mil. ?4. Donnie Darko - This is another one that looks like it cost a lot, but it was made with $ 4.5 mil. and I loved it 5. Reservoir Dogs - I know it's hip to trash Tarantino as just a hip poser, but he made an outstanding debut for $ 1.2 millionin 1992. Big budgets, sm ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: My favorite directors (by a ...
by Risselada in Directors
loved it.
"Yeah if I had made a list just off the top of my head it would be different no doubt. Some filmmakers I may have named were just weighed down because I hadn't seen a high enough percentage of their movies. For instance, Vittorio De Sica, Seijun Suzuki, Ingmar Bergman, Robert Bresson, Samuel Fuller, and probably the Zucker Abrahams Zucker team that made great stuff together and apart and was hard to get an accurrate rating for unlike the Coen brother who are a team but ALWAYS work together.Some filmmakers that I wouldn't maybe have put so high would be like PT Anderson or Alejandro González Iñárritu. And that's really just because I've seen most of their movies and they were good, but I dunno if I just want to list them that high.... And like Tarantino is a lot of fun, but there seems something about listing him too high that I just don't like. Eh. Hard to say why.As for female directors, I don't have too many with data entered in y ... " [More]
andthenpatternsandthenpatterns oh my (city of) god
by andthenpatterns in andthenpatterns Blog
loved it.
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"This is one of those films which I know I should have seen a long, long time ago. It's not as though I haven't had my chances: the film was shown as part of the Borderlines Film Festival a couple of years ago, and I didn't go, and then I taped it off Film4 a few months ago and promptly taped over it without watching. I think some part of me was afraid perhaps that it would be a worthy "situation" film, parading the terrible living conditions in the titular city for the viewing pleasure of an audience eager to shake their heads in disgust and talk concernedly amongst themselves of how awful it all is. I enjoyed Blood Diamond, Babel and Syriana, but they all left a vague sense of discontent in my stomach. They're films rather than movies to borrow a Cameron (James not David) analogy, and furthermore films designed to highlight "situations" as well as, and sometimes instead of, telling a story. Even the best films of this type (and three of them are listed above) a ... " [More]
mattdwmattdw Brasilian gang warfare with a s ...
by mattdw in mattdw Blog
loved it.
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"It's a brutal movie, with lots of blood and violence of the regrettable wish-it-hadn't-happened variety, but for all that it's a film with a surprising sense of humour and heart. " [More]
brotherjoel74brotherjoel74 everything you want to see in b ...
by brotherjoel74 in brotherjoel74 Blog
loved it.
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"This movie is great! every part of it is poetry. It has truely captured a time and place that most americans would ever dream. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Fernando Meirelles' City of God starts with a bang, and it doesn't just unfold quickly -- it flies at the audience like it was shot out of a cannon. Based on the novel by Paulo Lins, it's a vibrantly hyperkinetic, hyperstylized gangster-drug saga in the tradition of Goodfellas and Trainspotting, complete with jump cuts, whip pans, split screens, freeze frames, elliptical leaps back and forward in time, and wry, self-conscious narration. But City of God has its own unique soulfulness as it explores a vortex of intense poverty and violence that sucks in young men and boys of varied temperaments, who grow up more cynical and violent with each successive generation. Based on actual events and well-cast with nonprofessional young actors pulled from Cidade de Deus, a government-built slum outside Rio de Janeiro, the film exposes a shadow world just miles from a tourist paradise. Rocket (Alexandre Rodrigues), a good-natured boy who comically learns that he's not cut out to be a hoodlum, decides to become a photojournalist. He's the film's audience/author surrogate, narrator, and moral center. Lil' Dice (Douglas Silva), meanwhile, is a natural-born killer, a sociopath who craves power and loves violence. He grows up, changes his name to Lil' Zé (Leandro Firmino da Hora), and takes over most of the city's drug trade. They're surrounded by an assortment of colorful, well-drawn characters, each of whom eventually have to confront the consequences of their violent lifestyle. While Lil' Zé is the closest the film comes to a real villain, he's shown to be fully human, winning a little bit of audience sympathy when he confronts the fact that he can't find a girlfriend, before again veering off into psychotic mayhem. City of God is a thrilling, sardonically witty, vital, and disturbing cinematic tour de force. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 



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