Showing posts with label Chico Buarque. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chico Buarque. Show all posts

Monday, August 26, 2019

Bye Bye Brazil (Bye Bye Brasil)


(Left to right), Actor José Wilker, Betty Faria, Fábio Júnior, and director Carlos Diegues





Actor José Wilker in Rio de Janeiro







BYE BYE BRAZIL (Bye Bye Brasil)           A-                   
Brazil  France  Argentina  (110 mi)  1980 d:  Carlos Diegues

To the Brazilian people of the 21st Century
―title card at the end of the final credits

A tragi-comic road movie that literally goes in search of the Brazilian soul in this episodic quest for national identity, traveling some 9000 miles across a vast everchanging landscape into the heart of the Amazon, using a near documentary style of social realism mixed with flourishes of blatant theatricality in the form of Caravana Rolidei (Circus Holiday), a traveling circus group that scours the backwater towns in search of an audience, only to be thwarted by progress, as the national past time is watching TV, with viewers glued to the sets, disinterested in anything this road show can offer.  The overly flamboyant leader of the troupe is illusionist and “King of Dreams” Lord Cigano, José Wilker from Doña Flor and Her Two Husbands (Doña Flor e Seus Dois Maridos) (1976) playing another larger-than-life yet morally dubious role, basically a swindler and scam artist in search of an easy mark, joined by his precocious lover Salomé (Betty Faria), an exotic rhumba dancer who’s not afraid to step into the back room for a price, and deaf-mute Andorinha, aka Swallow (Príncipe Nabor), a black indigenous strong man and human flamethrower who also brings in wads of cash from high stakes arm-wrestling wagers (whose silence may reflect how the indigenous have been omitted from history).  The show is distinguished by a colorfully decorated truck that announces its arrival by loudspeaker, with master of ceremony Lord Cigano, outrageously dressed in a cape with clothes the color of the Brazilian flag, his face caked with make-up, resorting to exaggerated bravado and flowery language in describing what secrets are in store, always advertised as the greatest or most spectacular, yet in truth it’s a flimsy act barely worth one’s trouble, which is why they have to go deeper and deeper into the hinterlands to find places that buy into all the hyperbole.  The story becomes more about the people themselves, both the performers and the world at large, as it’s a beguiling and strangely compelling exposé of the slow transition into modernization, highlighted by the construction of the tree-lined Trans-Amazonian Highway that cuts through the heart of the rainforest and jungle, an ambitious project that connected the Northeast, the North, and the Central Plateau, previously isolated regions, each with their own cultural identities.  This roadway connection is an attempt to unify the country, but it comes at a price, as it’s massively expensive and destroys much of the natural world, literally plundering the resources from the rainforests, including lumber and mining development, causing pollution and water contamination, literally driving indigenous groups out of the forests, sending them into the cities where little opportunity awaits them, as companies either refuse to hire them or pay significantly less wages, a holdover of centuries of discrimination.  Additionally, government social services are unable to keep up with the population flow streaming into the cities looking for work, offering neighborhood slums for new arrivals in contrast to sleek modern skyscrapers.

Opening on the banks of the São Francisco River, we see river transport as the primary means of travel, a connection to the past, featuring a small traditional village with colonial architecture, street vendors selling herbs and various handicrafts, with folk music playing in the background.  Witnessing the performance is a peasant farmer and youthful accordionist Ciço (Fábio Júnior), grown weary of tilling the family’s barren lands, dreaming of faraway places with hopes of viewing the sea, along with his pregnant wife Dasdô (Zaira Zambelli), who barely utters a word in the entire film, yet has a profound effect, as her understated innocence and untainted vulnerability are the heart of the film, the only one without a motive, observing without making judgment, yet enduring it all, eventually bearing a child, ushering in a new future.  As the Caravana is leaving town, Ciço begs to come along, claiming he can play music, breaking into an invigorating tune, but they leave without him, only to back up and bring them along, with his accordion music playing as they head down the highway, initially to the sea, satisfying one of Ciço’s dreams, before cutting through the tropics in search of less developed regions outside the reach of advancing progress.  The seedy theatrical troupe recalls Bergman’s Sawdust and Tinsel (Gycklarnas afton) (1953), also bearing some resemblance to the traveling artists in Fellini’s LA STRADA (1954), where a more innocent Gelsomina is forced to contend with brutally crude strongman Zampanó, yet in each this life on the road was a means to escape the entrenched exploitation of the poor, offering a chance at something better, even if they barely made ends meet.  Much of what these films encapsulate is a dream for a better future, an attempt to overcome the dire impoverished circumstances of the past.  Diegues has a talent for the gritty realism of roadside photojournalism, adding a layer of complexity, capturing the melancholy uniqueness of each small village, exposing rural poverty and the inescapable reality of underdevelopment, carrying goods by ox cart, including the belongings of desperate people on the side of the road, as the stark imagery from cinematographer Lauro Escorel is as expressive in intimate moments as the sweeping jungle landscapes, becoming our visual guide through the journey.  Following shortly after the magnificent Wim Wenders film, Kings of the Road (Im Lauf der Zeit) Road Trilogy Pt. 3 (1976), there’s a curious American influence to both films, not just musically but in the presence of pinball machines in the jungle, or an indigenous family sipping coca cola, wearing designer jeans, eating ice-cream for the first time or listening to transistor radios, where their dream is to fly in an airplane.  While imagery may be what’s most remarkable about the film, they are accompanied by Chico Buarque’s uplifting soundtrack.

Featuring the contradictions brought on by globalization, with incomplete transitional stages in effect, where backwater squalor is set against a teeming urban metropolis, offering absurdly funny yet also bleakly sad reflections on the cultural impact felt across the nation.  The film reflects the changing culture of the country as it was making its transformation from military rule to a democratic government, as a rural-based society was heading towards rapid industrialization and urban migration.  Large-scale road development stimulated improved mass communication, particularly television, where broadcasting to all Brazilians was becoming possible.  With a remote interior village of Altamira advertised as a promised land, supposedly with food and wealth for everyone, a literal paradise on earth, they are surprised to discover it’s just another dusty village, a site where multi-national mining corporations are recruiting workers, flying them to remote locations where they’ll no doubt live in shabby conditions owned by the company, basically fleecing them with promises that never come, likely stuck in unimaginable filth and poverty, subjected to hazardous working conditions.  Dasdô delivers her baby out in the middle of an endless jungle, a baby girl, prompting Salomé to suggest it’s time for them to go, but Ciço is smitten by the exotic sensuality of Salomé, wanting to run away with her instead, but she sticks with Cigano, loyal to a fault.  Nevertheless, this tug of war of divergent interests keeps things interesting, with something unexpected always waiting in store for them, finding it more and more difficult to earn money, becoming destitute along the way, losing everything, forced into desperate straits, where they scatter like the winds.  Ciço and Dasdô make their way to Brasília, becoming part of a musical band in the local disco as the years pass, with mother and daughter on the triangles, doing backland variations of Bee-Gees songs, apparently doing fairly well for themselves when Ciço hears the familiar sounds of the truck loudspeakers promising an enchanted show.  Outside, a thoroughly modernized version of the Caravana Rolidey (now with a spelling correction) awaits, updated with dancing girls, a light show, and the crass commercialization of Frank Sinatra singing on cue, Frank Sinatra - Brazil (1958) - YouTube (2:55), with obscene sexual images painted onto the sides of the bus, led by the same enchanted duo of Lord Cigano and Salomé, suggesting sex never goes out of style.  Despite the allure of getting the band back together again, Ciço defers, liking the way things are, no longer searching for that elusive dream that never comes.  As the neon-lit bus heads down the road in pitch blackness, Cigano claps his hands and conjures up a morning sunshine, like Prospero in The Tempest, suggesting there’s something inherently magical about being Brazilian after all. 

Friday, August 23, 2019

Doña Flor and Her Two Husbands (Doña Flor e Seus Dois Maridos)





Director Bruno Barreto on the set with his leading lady Sônia Braga




 



DOÑA FLOR AND HER TWO HUSBANDS (Dona Flor e Seus Dois Maridos)  B+                  
Brazil  (110 mi)  1976 d:  Bruno Barreto
  
“He was a gigolo, a bum, and a shameless drunkard… A swindler, a penniless gambler, a cheap crook!  A scoundrel!”

A lightweight sex farce based on Jorge Amado’s 1966 fantasy novel that not only broke all Brazilian box office records as the most watched Brazilian film for some 35 years after its release (largely due to its success abroad), outgrossing both JAWS (1975) and STAR WARS (1977) combined at home, but it also introduced the world to Sônia Braga, a living legend who became an international star.  The director was only 21 at the time of the film’s release, but he is the son of Luiz Carlos Barreto, one of the most important Brazilian producers during the Cinema Novo period.  Equally important is the sensuous musical contribution from Chico Buarque, one of the artists from the Tropicália movement, or Tropicalismo, arrested at the height of the military dictatorship of the late 60’s and exiled to Italy until it was safe to return, but this film is reflective of the Bahian roots of the novelist while also a celebration of relaxed government censorship.  Set in 1943 in a city Amado helped popularize in his novels, fascinated with the culture of Salvador in the Bahia region (an historical slave port, with Brazil receiving more African slaves than any other country, driving the mining industry, also the sugar and coffee plantations, with Brazil the last country in the Western world to abolish slavery), with viewers captivated by wish-fulfillment fantasy and the exuberance of the mixed-race Bahian atmosphere, drawing upon Afro-Brazilian rituals and folklore, the film mirrors heightened Bahian interest in black culture, with white middle class inhibitions being starkly contrasted against the more openly expressive lifestyle of the black Bahian poor, where all the leads are notably light-skinned, with darker-skinned players serving lesser roles, reflecting a crucial racial stigmatization that still prevails in modern societies.  While the war and other social realities are nonexistent, of unusual interest, the original novel is a veritable record of Bahian cuisine and could be read just for the purposes of the culinary history of Bahia and the northeast of Brazil, where the film accentuates extended scenes describing food recipes in much the same way sex scenes are featured, with Braga teaching a culinary class while also not shying away from nudity (in stark contrast to the harsh repression of the ruling military regime), all designed to create a sensually exotic allure that became associated with Brazilian films.  Barreto attempted to recreate the magic several years later by adapting another Amado novel in GABRIELA (1983), an international project featuring Braga starring with Marcello Mastroianni, but the effort fell flat.  In fact, nothing in Barreto’s career has matched the commercial and artistic success of this early film.

Anyone who’s lived through the destructive social cliques in high school can remark upon seeing that elusively beautiful girl with a bad news boyfriend, often with disturbing results, as they’re really not a good match, but this film explores that marital dichotomy with exaggerated ribald humor, creating a Don Juan character who is a legendary scoundrel and a cheat, clever but morally dubious, with a reputation for drinking and womanizing that spreads throughout town from brothel to brothel, where he’s viewed with reverence.  In the opening segment, Vadinho (José Wilker) is seen drinking and singing openly on the street with a group of all-night Carnival revelers, dressed in drag where he’s strangely wearing a dress, fascinated by the appearance of a voluptuous female Carnival dancer whose booty-shaking rhythmic gyrations drives men wild, stirring them into a frenzy, with Vadinho joining in until he drops dead right there on the street.  His wife Doña Flor (Sônia Braga) is devastated, though a Greek chorus of well-wishers and gossipers offer a variety of opinions, thinking she’s better off without him, as he was a good-for-nothing lothario who brutally slapped her around and stole her money to go gambling, notoriously living at the roulette wheel where his dream was a run on number 17 that would make him rich beyond his dreams, downing rum like it’s mother’s milk during his infamous late night exploits of whore-mongering, famously sleeping with all the girls in the brothels, where his entire life was spent in childish indulgences where he’s the life of the party, while also revered as a hero by his cohort of gamblers and lowlifes as he refused to conform, but lived by his own rules, even seen at the roulette wheel on his wedding day.  Flor runs a cooking class on Bahian food, given an exotic context as it feels so dreamlike, letting her imagination run wild through local flavors, sending the film into an extensive flashback sequence, recalling how Vadinho loved her cooking, devouring her in bed as he would one of her meals, but he was utterly unreliable, out the door in a flash, always dressed in his white suit and hat, as do his bar-room friends, where it’s rare to see anyone dressed otherwise.  The women on the other hand are attired in bright colorful clothing, providing a tropical feel, always arriving in groups to offer Flor moral support after her husband stays out for days on end.  Despite losing sleep staying up at night waiting for him, it’s clear she adores the man in spite of his darker impulses, as he always puts a smile on her face promising to treat her as a queen.       

Vadinho’s indiscretions are the essential ingredient of the book and the film, as his carousing takes him to all walks of life, mixing with rich and poor alike, making no distinction, putting the finger on anyone he meets, even hitting the local priest for a gambling stake, which the padre simply can’t refuse, as the man can devilishly charm his way into anything.  Even after he’s gone, Flor has a hard time forgetting him (as does another young girl crying her eyes out at his funeral), as he’s left his larger-than-life imprint, where there’s literally no one else like him.  But after Vadinho, her mother pushes Flor towards respectability, the polar opposite of her first husband, thinking that’s the best thing for her, playing matchmaker with local pharmacist Teodoro (Mauro Mendonça), a perfect gentleman and a pillar of respectability in the community who looks admiringly on her from afar.  Despite his polite manner and cultivated bourgeois taste, with a flair for playing the bassoon, much is made of that absurdly comic obsession, bringing them an air of refinement, which ends up having little to do with her overall happiness.  An older man who is completely dull and unexciting in every respect, with everything in moderation, providing financial stability, which is important, and he’s considerate, but bland, lacking the animal magnetism of her first husband.  Despite the appearance of happiness, Flor is still not content, as her new husband can’t satisfy her sexual appetite, leaving her yearning for Vadinho, despite his reckless, devil-may-care attitude.   On the one year anniversary of her marriage, apparently from the afterlife, Vadinho actually reappears completely naked on her bed with a big smile on his face, as if to ask if she missed him.  Already knowing the answer, he pushes his luck, which sends her recoiling in fear, not wanting to cheat on her husband.  The gist of it is only Flor can see him (usually naked), as he’s returned as a ghost of himself, but he’s still up to his old ways, taking measures into his own hands to allow his barmates to go on that magical run at the roulette wheel that he never managed.  Easily the best scene is Vadinho sitting on a dresser laughing hysterically at the pathetic display of lovemaking in this new relationship, knowing immediately what she’s missing, encouraging her with kisses.  Somewhat humiliated, she’s torn by his presence, wishing he would just disappear.  In an epic display of Bahian black magic and voodoo, Flor attempts to fight the spirits to make him go away, and it nearly succeeds, which instantly scares the hell out of her, leaving her shockingly disappointed at the thought, immediately drawn to him again, which brings him back to her.  Through magical realism, a staple of South American literature, a kind of mythic resolution allows Flor to discover an imaginary way to keep both husbands, where the whimsical finale is a picture of bourgeois respectability, a threesome in bed, seen attending church, walking through the center of town, with Vadinho’s ghost tagging along stark naked, grabbing at Flor’s butt, where she is totally at peace with this new arrangement, while Teodoro remains utterly clueless about what’s going on.  While the film is a constant delight, the inherent patriarchal message, and sexist double standard, is that Vadinho, as a man, is free to carouse to his heart’s content, perhaps embodied by dictatorial regimes, while Flor, as a woman, may only imagine such sexual freedom, with her sensuality playing out in culinary expression.