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Certain Regard
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Critics' Week
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Official Selection
Estorvo
by
Ruy Guerra
Brazil/Portugal/Cuba

To say that Ruy Guerra was one of the pioneers of the Brazilian Cinema Novo movement of the 1960s would be to understate the importance of a world figure who has directed some 30 films in South America, Europe, and Africa. In addition, he has scripted or co-scripted nearly all his films, has worked as a film editor and cinematographer, acted in the films of others on occasion (including Werner Herzog's Aguirre, Wrath Of God, shot in the Amazones of Brazil), and usually produces himself every film he sincerely believes in.

Moreover, he has worked as a film critic and journalist, publishes stories and chronicles, is a playwright, directs stage productions, collaborates with several renowned Brazilian musicians as a songwriter, and presently teaches at the School of Cinema at Gama Fiho University in Rio de Janeiro. Most important of all, particularly for his film-making career, Ruy Guerra is a political activist. Born in 1931 in Lourenço Marques (today Maputo), Mozambique, when it was still a Portuguese colony, Ruy Guerra began writing film criticism at 17 while taking part in pro-independence movements and anti-racist activities. Two years later he left for Paris, where he enrolled in the two-year course at IDHEC (1952-54) for directing ­ although Guerra says he learned film-making by working on productions as assistant cameraman and assistant director.

His first short films, Song For Crossing The Water (1952) and When The Sun Sleeps (1954), were made at IDHEC. At the same time, he took courses in acting at the Charles Dullin School at TNP and could be seen in this capacity in Georges Rouquier's SOS Noronha (1956).

Moving on to Brazil, Guerra started but didn't finish two short films, but was on hand for others in the burgeoning Cinema Novo movement. He edited the Carlos Diegues episode in the omnibus film, Cinco Vezes Favela (1962), credited by many as the film that sparked the Cinema Novo movement, and acted in Flavio Migliaccio's Os Mendigos (1962). The breakthrough came with his first feature film, The Unscrupulous (1962), in which he applied French New Wave aesthetics to portray the bourgeois of Copacabana with its dismal milieu of indifference and countenance of sex and rape, blackmail and protection rackets, and other related crimes.

Guerra followed with a run of productions that made him a name as both a leader of Cinema Novo and a director capable of international productions. His Os Fuzis (The Guns) (1964), one of Cinema Novo's most important films, is extraordinary in that a sequel was made a decade later, A Queda (The Fall) (1976), in which a soldier who had fired on villagers during the time of government oppression is now himself a victim of exploitation as a worker on a Rio construction side. The Fall, co-directed by Nelson Xavier and a competition entry at the 1977 Berlinale, was hailed by critics as a modern parallel to the classic crime-and-punishment theme. His Os Deuses E Os Mortos (1970) was another Cinema Novo milestone.

When Mozambique declared its independence in the late 1970s, he returned there to participate in the founding of the National Institute of Cinema. His Mueda, Memoria E Massacre (Death, Memory And Massacre) (1979) was the first Mozambique feature film. Afterwards, he abandoned radical political statements to make a series of international co-productions in Latin America acclaimed for their aesthetic beauty and commercial entertainment quality: The Stolen Letter (1982), two screen adaptations of stories by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (Erendira, 1983, and The Story Of Bela Palomera, 1987), Malandro's Opera (1985), and Kuarup (1988), based on a novel by Atonio Callado.

Guerra's Estorvo (Turbulence), based on a novel by singer/song-writer Chico Buarque, chronicles the existential nightmare of an anonymous first-person character who roams through the streets of a modern city. The setting is Brazil today, the protagonist ("I") is awakened from a restless night by the ringing of the doorbell and the presence of a man in the doorway who provokes fear and uncertainty. The man sneaks away from his apartment to experience a panoply of dreams and hallucinations that reach far into the past ­ mother, sister, friends, thieves, cops, marijuana growers, dealers...


"Chico Buarque's book is so well known," says Guerra, "that it seems unnecessary to enunciate the power of the text, the skilled manipulation of its real and imaginary time, [to] praise the precise portrait of its characters, or [to] underline the accuracy of its dramatic trajectory ­ in which the absurd is defined in our own commonplaceness. The cinematic image will, I hope, as a film, come close to the literary sensation."

Ron Holloway



Cast Jorge Perugorria, Bianca Byington, Leonor Arocha
Screenplay
Ruy Guerra
Producer Jom Tob Azulay, Miguel Mendonza
Prod co Sky Light Cinema Foto e Art (Brazil), Rio Filme, D&D Audiovisuais, ICAE
Running Time 95 mins
Int'l Sales Serene Skylight International

Cannes 99 - Cannes 98 - Cannes 97 - Cannes 96 - Cannes 95