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Brazilian cinema was introduced early in the 20th century but took some time to consolidate itself as a popular form of entertainment. The film industry of Brazil has gone through periods of ups and downs, a reflection of its dependency on state funding and incentives.


History


Early days

A couple of months after the Lumière brothers' invention, a film exhibition was held in Rio de Janeiro. As early as 1898,
Affonso Segreto Affonso Segreto (born 1875) was a Brazilian filmmaker. Segreto was born in Brazil, the son of an Italian immigrant family. His brother Paschoal was also involved in the film industry, opening Brazil's first cinema in Rio de Janeiro on 31 July 189 ...
supposedly filmed the Guanabara Bay from the ship Brésil on a return journey from Europe, though some researchers question the veracity of this event as no copy of the film remains. He would go on to make documentaries with his brother Paschoal Segreto. From the early beginning of the 20th century, as early as 1900 to the year of 1912, Brazilian films had made a major impact on the internal market, as they produced over an annual production of one-hundred films. It is the year of 1908, also coined Brazil's "golden age" of Cinema, that the country saw its first widely popular film. The film was by Antonio Leal titled Os Estranguladores. An ad of a May 1987 issue of Gazeta de Petrópolis, as shown in 1995 by Jorge Vittorio Capellaro and Paulo Roberto Ferreira, was introduced as the new "birth certificate" of Brazilian cinema, as three short films were advertised: ''Chegada do Trem em Petrópolis'', ''Bailado de Crenças no Colégio de Andarahy'' and ''Ponto Terminal da Linha dos Bondes de Botafogo, Vendo-se os Passageiros Subir e Descer''. During this "belle-epoque" of Brazilian cinema, when black and white silent films were less costly to produce, most work resulted from the effort of passionate individuals willing to take on the task themselves rather than commercial enterprises. Neither is given much attention by the state, with legislation for the sector being practically non-existent. Film theaters only become larger in number in Rio and São Paulo late in the following decade, as power supply becomes more reliable. Foreign films as well as short films documenting local events were most common. Some of the first fictional work filmed in the country were the so-called "posed" films, reconstructions of crimes that had recently made the press headlines. The first success of this genre is António Leal and Francisco Marzullo's ''Os Estranguladores'' (1908). "Sung" films were also popular. The actors would hide behind the screen and dub themselves singing during projection. During the 1920s film production flourished throughout several regions of the country: Recife, Campinas, Cataguases, Juiz de Fora and Guaranésia. Also in the early 20th century of Brazilian cinema, there was a major lack of Black presence in films that were being made. Brazilian and American films are common in this aspect, as both countries had endured similar types of European colonization, and how the colored were not given any time or recognition on film. Many of the early films being produced in Brazil were also made by Italian Brazilians, with respect to the likes of
Affonso Segreto Affonso Segreto (born 1875) was a Brazilian filmmaker. Segreto was born in Brazil, the son of an Italian immigrant family. His brother Paschoal was also involved in the film industry, opening Brazil's first cinema in Rio de Janeiro on 31 July 189 ...
. Another way Brazil and America had similar aspects in their films is the idea of "blackface" in America, and the "redface" in Brazil. At the end of World War One, silent Brazilian cinema moved to the growing expansion of women and their social class, mainly the middle, and shows their modernization and diversification. Hollywood influenced the idea of women becoming more seductive in Brazilian cinema as well with new types of hairstyles, smoking cigarettes, and looking “exotic”, in terms of appearance. Hollywood films were also extremely popular during this time, accounting for as much as 85 percent of film material being exhibited on Brazilian screens in 1928. That year, an estimated 16,464,000 linear feet of film was exported to Brazil, making it Hollywood's third largest foreign market. European films, mostly from Germany and France, were also exhibited with relative frequency. Fan magazines like ''Cinearte'' and ''A Scena Muda'' were published during this time, featuring both domestic and Hollywood films and stars.


1930s and 1940s


Atlântida

During the 1940s and 1950s, films produced by the
Atlântida Cinematográfica Atlântida Cinematográfica was a Brazilian film studio, founded 18 September 1941 in Rio de Janeiro by Moacir Fenelon and José Carlos Burle. It produced a total of 66 films before 1962, when it ceased operations, having become the most succes ...
peaked and attracted large audiences by continuing with chanchadas. Among the actors that became strongly associated with Atlântida who had previously worked in Cinédia films are Oscarito, a comedian somewhat reminiscent of a Harpo Marx and commonly cast as lead, and Grande Otelo, who usually had a smaller supporting role and is often Oscarito's sidekick. The two of the actors became widely popular throughout Brazil as an amazing comical duo. Otelo, would see much of the humor falling on him at the time due to his Afro-Brazilian characteristics, while Oscarito became the comical foil in the film, a more pale-toned man with like characteristics. The two helped to display the diversity in Brazilian cinema to reflect on the diversity of Brazil itself. José Lewgoy was commonly cast as a villain while Zézé Macedo often took on the role of the undesired, nagging wife. The films of this period have often been brushed aside as being overly commercial and americanized, though by the seventies a certain amount of revisionism sought to restore its legitimacy. Despite being overlooked by intellectual elites, these films attracted large audiences as none of the Cinema Novo films would achieve. Today, the telenovela, especially the "novela das sete" (a nickname given to soap operas produced by the Rede Globo channel aired around seven p.m. Mondays through Saturdays) is sometimes identified as carrying on the spirit of the ''chanchada''. Many of the films produced by the company have been lost throughout the years due to fire and flooding of its storage facilities.


Vera Cruz

The
Companhia Cinematográfica Vera Cruz Companhia Cinematográfica Vera Cruz was an important Brazilian film studio founded in 1949 and closed in 1954. Located in São Bernardo do Campo, it was created by the industrialists Franco Zampari and Francisco Matarazzo Sobrinho. The company ...
was a production company founded in the state of São Paulo during the forties and most notable for its output during the following decade. It is in this period that Lima Barreto's classic '' O Cangaceiro'' was produced. The movement was named after the large production studio, inspired by
Hollywood Hollywood usually refers to: * Hollywood, Los Angeles, a neighborhood in California * Hollywood, a metonym for the cinema of the United States Hollywood may also refer to: Places United States * Hollywood District (disambiguation) * Hollywood, ...
scale. However, despite ''O Cangaceiro'', which was clearly inspired by western genre, the essence of these films followed the Italian cinema's style, popular between São Paulo's cultural elite in that time. Vera Cruz films were highly commercialized, which led some directors to begin experimenting with independent cinema. This movement away from commercialized Vera Cruz style films came to be called Cinema Novo, or New Cinema. Vera Cruz eventually bankrupted and closed.


Cinema Novo

Rocha often spoke of his films as being a departure from what he considered to be the colonizer's view, to whom poverty was an exotic and distant reality, as well as the colonized who regarded their third world status as shameful. He sought to portray misery, hunger and the violence they generate and thus suggest the need for a revolution. '' Deus e o Diabo na Terra do Sol'' and '' Terra em Transe'' are some of his most famous works. Other key directors of the movement include Nelson Pereira dos Santos, Ruy Guerra, Leon Hirszman, and Carlos Diegues. Freedom to express political views becomes scarce as the 1964 Brazilian military regime takes place and repression increases over the following years, forcing many of these artists with a
marxist Marxism is a Left-wing politics, left-wing to Far-left politics, far-left method of socioeconomic analysis that uses a Materialism, materialist interpretation of historical development, better known as historical materialism, to understand S ...
or
communist Communism (from Latin la, communis, lit=common, universal, label=none) is a far-left sociopolitical, philosophical, and economic ideology and current within the socialist movement whose goal is the establishment of a communist society, a s ...
bent into
exile Exile is primarily penal expulsion from one's native country, and secondarily expatriation or prolonged absence from one's homeland under either the compulsion of circumstance or the rigors of some high purpose. Usually persons and peoples suf ...
. In 1985, with the end of the military regime, these artists and singers returned to Brazil.


B Films

A "marginal cinema" emerges associated with the Boca de Lixo area in São Paulo. In 1968, Rogério Sganzerla releases '' O Bandido da Luz Vermelha'', a story based on an infamous criminal of the period. The following year Júlio Bressane's '' Killed the Family and Went to the Movies'' (''Matou a família e foi ao cinema'') came out, a story in which the protagonist does exactly what is described by the title. Marginal cinema of this period is sometimes also referred to as "udigrudi", a mocking of the English word underground. Also popular was Zé do Caixão, the screen alter ego of actor and horror film director José Mojica Marins. Associated with the genre is also the pornochanchada, a popular genre in the 1970s. As the name suggests, these were sex comedies, though they did not depict sex explicitly. One key factor as to why these marginal films thrived was that film theaters were obliged to obey quotas for national films. Many owners of such establishments would finance low-budget films, including those of pornographic content. Though the country was under military regime, censorship tended to be more political than cultural. That these films thrived could be perceived by many as a cause of embarrassment, yet they managed to draw in enough audiences so as to stay on the market consistently throughout those years.


1970s and 1980s

Films in this period benefited from state-run agencies, most notably Embrafilme. Its role was perceived as somewhat ambiguous. It was criticized for its dubious selection criteria, bureaucracy and favouritism, and was seen as a form of government control over artistic production. On the other hand, much of the work of this period was produced mainly because of its existence. A varied and memorable filmography was produced, including Arnaldo Jabor's adaptation of Nelson Rodrigues' '' All Nudity Shall Be Punished'' (1973), Carlos Diegues' '' Bye Bye Brazil'' (1979), Hector Babenco's '' Pixote'' (1981) and Nelson Pereira do Santos' '' Memoirs of Prison'' (1984). One of the most successful films in Brazilian film history is an adaptation of Jorge Amado's '' Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands'' (1976) by Bruno Barreto.


Retomada and contemporary cinema

The early nineties, under the Fernando Collor government, saw a significant decrease in State funding that lead to a practical halt in film production and the closing of Embrafilme in 1989. However, in the mid nineties the country witnessed a new burst in cinematic production, mainly thanks to the introduction of incentive laws under the new FHC government. The comedy '' Carlota Joaquina - Princess of Brazil'' came out in 1995 and is held by many as the first film of the ''retomada'', or the return of national film production. Since then there have been films with Academy Award nominations such as '' O Quatrilho'', ''
Four Days in September ''Four Days in September'' ( pt, O Que É Isso, Companheiro?) is a 1997 Brazilian thriller film directed by Bruno Barreto and produced by his parents Lucy and Luiz Carlos Barreto. It is a dramatized version of the 1969 kidnapping of the United ...
'', '' Central Station'' and '' City of God''. The dark urban film ''
The Trespasser Trespasser In the law of tort, property, and criminal law a trespasser is a person who commits the act of trespassing on a property, that is, without the permission of the owner. Being present on land as a trespasser thereto creates liabi ...
'' was chosen as the best film of the period by magazine Revista de Cinema. Some other films that have attracted attention are '' Carandiru'', ''
The Man Who Copied ''The Man Who Copied'' ( pt, O Homem que Copiava; ) is a 2003 Brazilian crime comedy-drama film written and directed by Jorge Furtado, set in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. ''The Man Who Copied'' takes the form of a "how-to" guide for ...
'', '' Madame Satã'', '' Behind the Sun'', ''
Olga Olga may refer to: People and fictional characters * Olga (name), a given name, including a list of people and fictional characters named Olga or Olha * Michael Algar (born 1962), English singer also known as "Olga" Places Russia * Olga, Russia, ...
'' and '' Two Sons of Francisco'', though perhaps some of these would no longer qualify as films of the ''retomada'', since the term is only adequate to describe the initial boost that occurred in the nineties. Still common in Brazilian cinema is a taste for social and political criticism, a trait that reflects its strong Cinema Novo influences. For the common movie goer, there has been a shift in perception towards Brazilian cinema as becoming more audience friendly. Television shows of the Rede Globo network such as '' Casseta & Planeta'' and '' Os Normais'' have also received film versions and Globo Filmes, Globo's film production branch, has been behind many of the films that have come out over the years, often as a co-producer. Globo's presence is seen by some critics as being overly commercial, thus compelling certain filmmakers to work outside its system to create independent work. Documentaries have also had a strong place in Brazilian cinema thanks to the work of renowned directors such as
Eduardo Coutinho Eduardo de Oliveira Coutinho (May 11, 1933 – February 2, 2014) was a Brazilian film director, screen writer, actor and film producer, known as one of the most important documentarists in Brazil. He directed and wrote the script to the 1967 po ...
and
João Moreira Salles João Moreira Salles (Rio de Janeiro, born 1962) is a Brazilian documentarian and president of the Instituto Moreira Salles. In 2006, he founded the magazine piauí. He has also taught courses on documentary at the Pontifical Catholic Universit ...
. In 2007, the film ''
Elite Squad ''Elite Squad'' ( pt, Tropa de Elite, ) is a 2007 Brazilian crime film based on the novel ''Elite da Tropa'' by Luiz Eduardo Soares, André Batista, and Rodrigo Pimentel. Directed by José Padilha from a screenplay by Padilha, Bráulio Manto ...
'' gained headlines due to how quickly leaked DVD copies spread among viewers before its release on theaters, but also due to the large number of audience members who cheered
police brutality Police brutality is the excessive and unwarranted use of force by law enforcement against an individual or a group. It is an extreme form of police misconduct and is a civil rights violation. Police brutality includes, but is not limited to, ...
scenes.


Domestic market

Since the 1970s, the quantity of film theaters has declined heavily. During the 1990s, it became common for small theaters to close while
multiplex theater A multiplex is a movie theater complex with multiple screens within a single complex. They are usually housed in a specially designed building. Sometimes, an existing venue undergoes a renovation where the existing auditoriums are split into s ...
s, which are usually found in
shopping center A shopping center (American English) or shopping centre (Commonwealth English), also called a shopping complex, shopping arcade, shopping plaza or galleria, is a group of shops built together, sometimes under one roof. The first known collec ...
s, gained market share. In the last decades, the accessibility of televisions and
computer A computer is a machine that can be programmed to Execution (computing), carry out sequences of arithmetic or logical operations (computation) automatically. Modern digital electronic computers can perform generic sets of operations known as C ...
s sold at lower prices combined with success in making telenovelas of high production quality made cinema less attractive to lower income audiences. In addition, ticket prices increased more than tenfold in a span of twenty years. In the early 1990s Brazilian film production suffered as a result of the president Fernando Collor's laissez-faire policy; the sector had depended on state sponsorship and protection. However, with the ''retomada'' Brazilian film regained speed, though not to the same extent it had seen before. A significant increase in audience was recorded, however, from 2000 to 2002, with 7 million viewers, to 2003, when 22 million viewers came to theaters to watch national
film A film also called a movie, motion picture, moving picture, picture, photoplay or (slang) flick is a work of visual art that simulates experiences and otherwise communicates ideas, stories, perceptions, feelings, beauty, or atmosphere ...
s. Because these films were made possible thanks to incentive laws introduced in the 1990s and that the number of viewers drawn in from year to year can fluctuate significantly, it is often questioned whether film production has in fact reached a certain amount of stability and whether or not it could in the future succumb to any governmental whims. Incentive laws allow Brazilian films to receive funding from companies that, by acting as sponsors, are allowed tax deductions. A common criticism is that, through this system, though films are no longer directly controlled by state, they are, nevertheless, subject to the approval of entrepreneurs who are logically cautious as to which content they wish to associate their brands. Even with funding, there are still areas that require some struggle from filmmakers, such as distribution, television participation and DVD release.Cinema of Brazil
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See also

* List of Brazilian films *
List of Brazilian film directors This is a list of notable Brazilian film directors born in Brazil or who have established Brazilian citizenship or residency. Pioneers * Lima Barreto * Humberto Mauro * Mário Peixoto Cinema Novo * Joaquim Pedro de Andrade * Cacá Diegues ...
* List of awards and nominations for Brazilian films *
List of Academy Awards nominations for Brazilian films A list of Brazilian Academy Award winners and nominees appears below. The first Brazilian to be nominated for an Academy Award was Ary Barroso, one of Música Popular Brasileira's greatest composers, in 1945. As of 2023, only one Brazilian has ...
* Abraccine Top 100 Brazilian films *
Mouth of Garbage Cinema Cinema da Boca do Lixo (''Mouth of Garbage film'') is the collective name for a film genre associated with the Boca do Lixo ("Mouth of Garbage") downtown area of São Paulo, Brazil. On par with French Nouvelle Vague and American slasher films, ...
* Grande Prêmio do Cinema Brasileiro *
Cinemateca do Museu de Arte Moderna Cinemateca do Museu de Arte Moderna is a film archive located in Brazil. Its collection comprises 80,000 film reels and a 10,000 volumes library. It was founded in 1948.https://mam.rio/cinemateca/cinemateca-historico/ See also * List of film ar ...


References


Sources

* PINAZZA, Natália and BAYMAN, Louis (eds) (2013). 'Directory of World Cinema: Brazil. Bristol: Intellect. * AUGUSTO, Sérgio. ''Esse mundo é um pandeiro: chanchada de Getúlio a JK''. Companhia das Letras. *BENAMOU, Catherine, and MARSH, Leslie Louise. "Women Filmmakers and Citizenship in Brazil: From ''Bossa Nova'' to the ''Retomada''." In ''Hispanic and Lusophone Women Filmmakers: Theory, Practice and Differences'' ed. Parvati Nari and Julián Daniel Gutierrez-Albilla, 54-71. Manchester, England: University of Manchester Press, 2013. *BURTON, Julianne. Cinema and Social Change in Latin America: Conversations with Filmmakers. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1986. *DENNISON, Stephanie and SHAW, Lisa. Popular Cinema in Brazil. Manchester, England: University Manchester Press, 2004. *GOMES, Paulo Emilo Sales. ''Cinema: trajetória no subdesenvolvimento''. Paz e Terra. * ''30 Anos de Cinema e Festival: a história do Festival de Brasília do Cinema Brasileiro'' / coordinated by Berê Bahia. Brasília, Fundação Cultural do Distrito Federal, 1998. * CALDAS, Ricardo Wahrendorff & MONTORO, Tânia. ''A Evolução do Cinema no Século XX''. Casa das Musas, Brasília, 2006. * ''Brazilian Cinema''. Ministry of Culture, Brasília 1999 (catalog). *''Glauber Rocha: del hambre al sueño. Obra, política y pensamiento''. Malba - Colección Constantini, Artes Gráficas Ronor S.A., April 2004. *NAGIB, Lúcia. ''Brazil on Screen: Cinema Nôvo, New Cinema, Utopia''. London: IB Tauris, 2007. *NAGIB, Lúcia, ed. ''The New Brazilian Cinema''. London: I.B. Tauris & Co, 2006. *PICK, Suzana M. ''The New Latin American Cinema: A Continental Project''. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1993. *TORRES SAN MARTÍN, Patricia. "Lost and Invisible: A History of Latin American Women Filmmakers." ''In Hispanic and Lusophone Women Filmmakers: Theory, Practice and Differences'' ed. Parvati Nari and Julián Daniel Gutierrez-Albilla, 29-41. Manchester, England: University of Manchester Press, 2013. *WILSON, Pamela, and Stewart, Michelle. ''Global Indigenous Media: Cultures, Poetics, and Politics''. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008.


Further reading

* Robert Stam: ''Tropical Multiculturalism - PB: A Comparative History of Race in Brazilian Cinema and Culture'' (Latin America Otherwise, Duke University Press, 1997,


External links


Nelson Pereira dos Santos profile by Hudson MouraTop 10 movies from Brazil in IMDB.comBrazilian Cinema: Film in the Land of Black Orpheus by Glauco Ortolano and Julie A. Porter (English)The Best Brazilian Films of All Time (English)Cinemabrasileiro.net, web about Brazilian cinemaAtlântida Cinematográfica website (Portuguese)
* ttp://www.cinemabrasil.org.br CINEMA BRASIL - Instituto Cultural Cinema Brasil - Brazilian Movies database (Portuguese, English and French)br>Cinemateca Brasileira (Portuguese)Complete list of Brazilian movies (Portuguese)On Brazilian Cinema by Michael Korfmann (English)Text on Glauber Rocha (English)The Rise of the Mandacaru: Brazilian Cinema Renewed by Jorge Didaco (English)Vera Cruz website (Portuguese)Tupiniquim Japan, the largest Brazilian Film promoter in JapanExtensive list of Brazilian Films

MuseCom cinematographic repository
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