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Quilombo

  • 1984
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
538
YOUR RATING
Quilombo (1984)
Drama

Palmares is a 17th-century quilombo, a settlement of escaped slaves in northeast Brazil. In 1650, plantation slaves revolt and head for the mountains where they find others led by the aged s... Read allPalmares is a 17th-century quilombo, a settlement of escaped slaves in northeast Brazil. In 1650, plantation slaves revolt and head for the mountains where they find others led by the aged seer, Acotirene. She anoints one who becomes Ganga Zumba, a legendary king. For years, his ... Read allPalmares is a 17th-century quilombo, a settlement of escaped slaves in northeast Brazil. In 1650, plantation slaves revolt and head for the mountains where they find others led by the aged seer, Acotirene. She anoints one who becomes Ganga Zumba, a legendary king. For years, his warriors hold off Portuguese raiders; then he agrees to leave the mountains in exchange fo... Read all

  • Director
    • Carlos Diegues
  • Writers
    • Carlos Diegues
    • João Felicio dos Santos
    • Décio Freitas
  • Stars
    • Bené Batista
    • Jonas Bloch
    • Zózimo Bulbul
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    538
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Carlos Diegues
    • Writers
      • Carlos Diegues
      • João Felicio dos Santos
      • Décio Freitas
    • Stars
      • Bené Batista
      • Jonas Bloch
      • Zózimo Bulbul
    • 7User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos13

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    Top cast49

    Edit
    Bené Batista
    • Ibualama…
    Jonas Bloch
    Jonas Bloch
    • Samuel
    Zózimo Bulbul
    • Stone Man
    Emmanuel Cavalcanti
    • Lins
    Arduíno Colassanti
    • Blaer
    Jorge Coutinho
    • Salé
    Babaú da Mangueira
    Roberto de Cleto
    • Father Mello
    Aniceto do Império
    Maurício do Valle
    • Dominingos Jorge Velho
    Chico Díaz
    Chico Díaz
    • Anunciação
    Sabrina Fidalgo
    Sabrina Fidalgo
    Daniel Filho
    Daniel Filho
    • Fernão Carrilho
    Jorge Fino
    • Iabu
    Vera Fischer
    Vera Fischer
    • Ana de Ferro
    Léa Garcia
    Milton Gonçalves
    Milton Gonçalves
    • Dying slave
    Thiago Justino
    • Tité
    • Director
      • Carlos Diegues
    • Writers
      • Carlos Diegues
      • João Felicio dos Santos
      • Décio Freitas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.6538
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    Featured reviews

    8dan-1583

    The John Ford of Brazil? Perhaps...

    This is a very good film that tries to do something deceptively difficult. As a result, it may tend to be judged wanting by those looking for an historical recreation of a period not much known outside Brazil.

    Carlos Diegues tries to convey something of the roots of the cultural collision that is Brazil. Think of it: you are a slave that has freed themselves from your bondage, but home is thousands of miles away, and no serious possibility of return exists. The choice is to make a new life out of what is before you, in the context of your belief systems, music and language that belong to the inaccessible mother country. What do you do? In the backwoods, the slave colony or Quilombo called Palmares is something between myth and promise.

    Rather than focus on the practical struggles and a realist approach, Diegues takes a theatrical, even operatic approach. One reviewer dismissed the music, which is by Gilberto Gil, one of Brazil's greatest pop musicians, and a major force in the defining of afrobrazilian identity in Brazil since the sixties, not to mention Brazil's Minister of Culture as of this writing, calling it cheesy disco. It's true that to anyone who comes to this movie without any awareness of Brazilian attitudes to culture, and particularly the eclecticism of the tropicalia movement that Gil helped form, the anachronism of the terrific samba might seem mystifying. But it is worth saying that the rock and disco soundtrack of A Knight's Tale, led no-one to assume that the director was naive. Here, Brazil anticipates that cleverness by a decade, and uses it to make a point about the continuity and importance of African rhythm in Brazilian culture.

    The film has also to be seen in the context of the brutal dictatorship that ruled Brazil until 1985, just one year after the film was made: the obvious commentary on the regime, and the danger of open criticism necessitated the theatricality and probably discouraged realism as a narrative approach in a film that tells the story of violent and brutal masters, and people who want only to be free.

    Many cultures find it hard to accept that other cultures share sophistication with them, and in part this movie as about creating a history of the transfer of black African culture from Africa to the Americas. This in not presented as a primitive or 'atavistic' enterprise, but as an enormously inventive and creative period. The institution of slavery, which lasted longer in Brazil than most colonies, created myths of inferiority that are too familiar, and still lead too often to assumptions about black culture. This movie is about stating the opposite. Of course, life in the wild west wasn't really the way John Ford depicted it, and this is in the same spirit of mythologizing and celebrating, of inventing a past to replace the other fictions that also pass for history.

    The depictions of the interaction of the Orixas with the protagonists is startling, as is the appearance of the dead. Watch for the great sequence when Xango first is seen to enter Ganga Zumbi, a sequence with overtones of the modern practice of Candomblé, Brazil's second religion, and the syncretic creation of the freed afrobrazilians. The use of colour, both in the body painting and sets, and the lighting is clever, beautiful and disciplined, and conveys something important about the difference in consciousness of the Portuguese masters and their oppressed slaves. Diegues manages to move smoothly from near-realism to utter artifice throughout, but most wonderfully in these sequences.

    That said, and without softening the recommendation, this film is a product of its time and place. It just happens to be a time and place not tied to the banal conventions that mainstream film often imposes.
    7ThurstonHunger

    Art triumphs in the end

    Are you like me, where you get to a point and the best gift someone can give you is to recommend an album, book or movie?

    Well recommending this was my gift this year from one of my kids, and I'm grateful for it.

    At the outset, I immediately recognized Gilberto Gil's voice, and as my son predicted the music here serves as one significant delight - granted some of that 80's electric bass fusion was a little tricky for my ears.

    Going in, I knew nothing of the specifics to Brazilian history circa the 1600's and slave trade. I knew a little more about Vodoun characters, and it was interesting to see the shadows of Shango and Ogun appear here, and led by a Zumbi defying death no less.

    The film has the elements of rebels/resistance combined with feels like a Carneval-esque celebration between battle scenes. My son came across it as part of a Surreal Films class, but the professor/he point out that is far more in the magical realism realm. There are points where tribal leaders assemble in color and strike poses that reminded us of a Japanese anime. Power Rangers precursors?

    Granted the film is serious at its heart - fight for dignity and freedom is important, and comes with a horrific loss of life through-out - there is a spirit of celebration, and elements just this side of magic, that make it an exhilarating watch albeit dated in cinematic technique.

    Enjoy it for the songs and costume design (could have spent all 600 characters on that alone), and for the fact that in Brazil, the US and beyond we are still bending towards a more just if not more magical world.
    9Anyanwu

    An excellent film depiction, despite some creative license of Palmares and the rise of Zumbi.

    This is a relatively close historical depiction of the resistance of the displaced Africans, mostly from Angola, to Brazil for use as slaves for the Portuguese. Diegues maintains historical accuracy of the quilombo(kilombo) called Palmares and the life the escaped Africans led and their struggle to lead that life far from the oppressive Portuguese. This is one of the few films which tells the story of African people actively resisting European slavers. Quilombo also follows the life of Zumbi, the death of Ganga Zumba,the initial leader of Palmares and Zumbi's rise to become the eventual leader of Palmares. For anyone looking at history and its true representation in film, this is a good start. It plays close to the vest in historical authenticity.
    1jg1972

    historically interesting, but a horrible production

    This film tells the true story of escaped black slaves who found their own mountain-top commune as free men in 17th-century Brazil. The story is interesting and edifying. However, this film -- as a film -- is terrible.

    The soundtrack is not period music or tribal music. It is Afro-Brazilian pop music from the early 1980s. Battle scenes are fought to the sounds of cheesy pop rhythms best left to the disco or bad cops dramas. Admittedly, the lyrics are folk-ish tales of the slaves' heroism. The special effects are absurd. Rather than invoke the mysticism of African religion and atavistic beliefs, they merely make the film look cheap. They are completely unbelievable, and I don't mean merely in a sense of verisimilitude.

    Life within the commune of Palmares could not have been the way it is portrayed in the film. For this society, as shown in the film, is one-part kibbutz, one-part Afro-pop festival. Moreover, it is almost embarrassing to watch the director play upon the clichés of blacks as talented singers and dancers who simply want to be happy. He portrays daily life as a series of dance parties in which the freed slaves paint themselves bright colors and whirl around to the strains of '80s pop music. On the other hand, they have an abundance of beautiful food, but the viewer hardly sees any work being done. The king inveighs against private property in a hackneyed and clichéd way. When a man complains that people are taking the vegetables that he has grown over many months, the king says, "What comes from the earth belongs to everyone, as the earth belongs to no one. If they need food, they have a right to take yours."

    I am glad that I learned about this episode in history, but I am relieved that a film with such low production values and that trades upon such worn stereotypes would likely not be made today.
    9mjhr

    An exuberant film

    A very fun, vibrant, exciting, and moving tale of escaped slaves setting up their own community. Like all of Diegues films, it's not meant to be precisely accurate - and if you're hoping for a Hollywood budget and historical verisimilitude you won't find them here. What you will find is a passion for film making, and a passion for a great story, and some joyful, exuberant acting. The use of music is excellent, the sounds chosen to evoke the present. The use of color is wonderful, like watching a Mardi gras parade in Rio. The camera work is fluid and the framing busy yet focused. The sort of film you want to watch immediately again to catch all the action in the frame you didn't see the first go through.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Camila Pitanga's debut.
    • Goofs
      (at around 1h52:07) Towards the end of the film, Zumbi tells Camuanga that there is breadfruit nearby. Impossible: this scene takes place in 1694, but breadfruit was not introduced to the New World (from Polynesia, by Capt. Bligh) until nearly a century later, in 1791.
    • Connections
      Featured in Making of - Quilombo (1984)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 14, 1984 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Brazil
      • France
    • Language
      • Portuguese
    • Filming locations
      • Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil(location)
    • Production companies
      • CDK
      • Embrafilme
      • Gaumont
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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