Two periods of Brazilian film history are particularly notable for their
artistic momentum: the Cinema Novo movement of the 1960s and early '70s,
and the film revival from the mid 1990s onwards. What makes them
especially strong, this book argues, is their utopian impulse. By
adopting Utopia as a theme, as well as a method of film analysis, Lucia
Nagib unveils, organises and interprets a fascinating wealth of
recurrent images, which are a bridge between a cinema strongly concerned
with the national project and another informed by global culture.
Outstanding recent films, such as "Central Station", "Perfumed Ball",
"Hans Staden", "Orfeu", "City of God" and "The Trespasser", are
illuminated by Nagib's sharp analysis, which detects utopian,
anti-utopian and even dystopian impulses in them. They are at once
representatives of a political arena in constant struggle against
underdevelopment and legitimate (as well as critical) heirs of past
cinematic traditions.
Throwing new light on a large selection of Cinema Novo and contemporary
films, this book thus presents a national cinema that rejects the end of
history and of film history, while benefiting from, and contributing to,
a new transnational aesthetics.