Passion, Drama, Colour! But Hey, This Isn’t Rugby..
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date:
Thursday 13 October 2011.
Passion, Drama, Colour!
But Hey, This Isn’t
Rugby...
The 3rd Reel Brazil
Film Festival lands in Auckland, after doing one week in
Wellington.
After steaming up
Wellington with a hot and contemporary selection of films,
the 3rd Reel Brazil arrives in Auckland, post Rugby
World Cup, on Thursday the 27th of October. The Brazilians
are back with a concise and well-awarded selection of 8
features and documentaries as well as the best elements of
previous festivals: the Corporate Opening Night, ($35 -
includes live Bossa Nova, Brazilian canapés, the famous
cocktails, and prime New Zealand wine), and the Reel Brazil
Festa, (free for all, with live music and DJ).
The
Corporate Opening Night is an event that combines the love
of film with a corporate backdrop for businesses to network
and entertain clients. According to festival director and
expat Brazilian Leandro Cavalcanti: “The Corporate Opening
Night is to bring business and people together that share
interests in Latin America. It’s not something done for
gringos. If I were in Brazil, I would do it in
exactly the same way - it is very authentic.”
But
if you are thinking bikinis, carnival, and football, think
again. The films reflect Brazil today – global, connected
and culturally diverse. Enduring themes of freedom,
tolerance, diversity and spirituality are merged with
subject matter that has universal appeal, be it science
fiction, quirky black humour, or showcasing inspirational
stories that, according to Cavalcanti, “Kiwis will be
able to relate to”.
The films range from black
comedy “Reflections of a Blender”, starring a
philosophizing blender who may be a murder accomplice, to
the music doco “A Night in 67”, celebrating the
Brazilian era of festivals when musicians like Caetano
Veloso and Gilberto Gil were made or broken by
gladiator-style crowds.
The Opening feature,
“VIPs”, is an award-winning caper film starring
Wagner Moura (Elite Sqaud), Brazil’s No. 1 movie
star of the moment. The plot has echoes of Catch Me If
You Can, but with a distinctly Latin American
context and Moura’s incredible performance as the charming
but vulnerable Marcelo that won him best actor at Rio’s
2010 International Film Film Festival.
Documentary
“Dzi Croquettes”, winner of an impressive 20
awards including the Brazilian equivalent of the 2011 Oscar,
is about an infamous Brazilian dance-theatre troupe from the
70’s adored by the likes of Liza Manelli and Mick Jagger,
who revolutionized Brazil’s gay rights movement by
confronting the violent regime of their time. Still on the
topic of defiance is the documentary
“Smokescreen”, which debates international drug
laws and their consequences on society.
The festival
programme also includes some special effects wizardry, with
films like “Besouro”, choreographed by Hong Kong
master Huen Chiu Ku (Matrix and Kill Bill),
about Besouro, a capoeira legend (Brazilian martial art) and
the sci fi, life after death drama, “Our Home: Astral
City”. The latter comes with an outstanding musical
score by the American symphony and opera composer, Phillip
Glass.
“This year the films are the most
contemporary and award-winning films that we have ever
brought to premiere in New Zealand. In fact, all but one of
the films will be Australasian premieres. Four of the films
– Our Home: Astral City, Smokescreen, Dzi Croquettes and
VIPs - are all on current release in Brazil” says
Cavalcanti.
[END]