''The Red Light Bandit'' () is a 1968 Brazilian
crime film directed by
Rogério Sganzerla,
inspired by the crimes of the famous real-life robber
João Acácio Pereira da Costa, nicknamed the "Red Light Bandit" (''Bandido da Luz Vermelha''). The film is regarded as a classic work of ''
Cinema Marginal'', the Brazilian underground filmmaking movement of the 1960s. Sganzerla was about 22 years old when he directed it.
Sganzerla called the film ''a
Third World western''.
Plot
Born and raised in the Brazilian slums, Jorge is a burglar of luxury houses in
São Paulo
São Paulo (; ; Portuguese for 'Paul the Apostle, Saint Paul') is the capital of the São Paulo (state), state of São Paulo, as well as the List of cities in Brazil by population, most populous city in Brazil, the List of largest cities in the ...
. He baffles the police with his unusual ''
modus operandi'', and is nicknamed is "The Red Light Bandit" by the sensationalist press. Wearing a red flashlight he breaks into houses at night, rapes his female victims and has long irreverent conversations with them, makes daring escapes, and then spends the profits of his crimes extravagantly in the decadent
Boca do Lixo district. His criminal exploits are shown in a fragmented manner, voiced over by two narrators in the style of a sensationalistic radio program.
He has an affair with Janete Jane, he meets with other burglars and a corrupt politician, and gets betrayed. Pursued and cornered, he has only one way out of his career of crime: suicide.
Cast
* Paulo Villaça as Jorge, the Red Light Bandit
*
Helena Ignez as Janete Jane
* Luiz Linhares as police officer Cabeção
* Pagano Sobrinho as J.B. da Silva
* Roberto Luna as Lucho Gatica
* José Marinho as Tarzan
* Ezequiel Neves as Reporter
*
Sérgio Mamberti as Homosexual
* Renato Consorte as TV host
*
Sérgio Hingst as Millionaire
* Lola Brah as Rich Woman
* Antonio Lima as Gangster
* Ozualdo Candeias as Criminal
*
Maurice Capovilla as Gangster
*
Carlos Reichenbach as Gangster
*
Sônia Braga as Victim
Reception
Film critic Ismail Xavier stated that the film treats the criminal's social milieu with irony, making use of collage, intertextuality and pastiche, in contrast with ''
Cinema Novos naturalistic filmmaking.
In 2015, ''The Red Light Bandit'' was chosen by
Abraccine, the Brazilian Association of Film Critics, as the sixth best Brazilian film of all time. It was listed by Jeanne O Santos, from ''Cinema em Cena'' (Cinema Scene), as a "national classic".
Awards and nominations
1968 Festival de Brasília (Brazil)
* Best Costume
* Best Director
* Best Editing
* Best Film
Sequel
A sequel directed by Ícaro Martins and
Helena Ignez, widow of Sganzerla, was released in 2010: ''Luz nas Trevas - A Volta do Bandido da Luz Vermelha''.
References
External links
''The Red Light Bandit'' on Enciclopédia Itaú Cultural(in Portuguese)
*
*
Crime films based on actual events
1960s Portuguese-language films
Brazilian crime films
1968 films
Films set in São Paulo
1968 crime films
Brazilian black-and-white films
1960s Brazilian films
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