BasicLogic
From the very beginning, lot of the scenes in this film are utterly unnecessary. Some reviewers called it existentialism, but did you guys really know what's existentialism means? I don't know about it. But at least I know that loving making in group sex on the beach, talking about masturbation when you were lonely or hungry in a bar, could hardly wait to take off your underwear to let the man easily penetrate you from behind....got nothing to do with the existentialism. Feeling lonely in a crowd space, in a deadbeat city, dealing with so many walking-dead old patients everyday....but neither such depression nor such frustration would be qualified for existentialism. I really don't know what's the purpose of making this film, and some reviewer wishing this film could go on and on and never end....Well, if existentialism mixed with women seeking men, men seeking women could be really that fun, then existentialism needs Viagra to sustain it to go on forever.
Tom Dooley
This is billed as 'a fairytale in reverse' and I think it is easy to see why. Veronica is a newly qualified Psychiatrist in Recife, Brazil - she starts work as an intern at the City public hospital. She lives and dotes on her ageing and dying father. She has a great bunch of friends and a lover - Gustavo - who says he really loves her. So not a bad lot in life.However, once she starts diagnosing her patients it opens a window on herself and she starts trying to diagnose what is wrong with her. She can not find romance but instead would rather have a one night stand with random pick ups of which Gustavo is aware. It is almost that the sex, self treatment and the songs she sings to her Dictaphone are all part of some healing process until she can find the cure to herself. The anti fairy tale part comes with the realisation that there is not a fairy godmother or an inevitable happy ending and probably the acceptance of such that make you be able to cope with whatever life throws at you.Along the way there is a lot packed in and the relationship between father and daughter is really touching.This is told in a series of scenes that run in a linear narrative form and take us on the full scope of emotions and experiences for Veronica. It has a poetical feel in places and arty nudity in others. There is a fair amount of flesh on display here but it all seems rather natural, no one is trying to be super sexy or cool just as nature intended and that too adds to the overall mood of what is basically an art house film.Please note I received a review copy for review purposes. The musical score is really rather nice too. This is from director Marcelo Gomes who has not had enough exposure outside of Brazil, but I think if he continues to make such self assured films like this then that position will change.
buddy-63
The other reviews here have easily fallen into the trap that Independent Films often provide. Start with moody cinematography, a lack of a rational plot, a heroic main character who finds life baffling, and a non-ending ending: There you have the formula for praise. Since I already know the deal, I often find myself at odds with the majority of reviewers. Take my advice--write down the scenario I just outlined, watch this movie, and see if I haven't nailed it. There is one character we will find appealing--a sweet old father who is tied to the hip of his daughter (and she his) and is slowly dying without knowing it. The love she freely gives to him is in direct contrast to her inability to connect in a romantic relationship. Her main use of men is for sex, which she adores, but prefers to have with random guys who she never wants to see again. She mistreats the one man that professes to love her (I think he just likes her body), even pretending to her father that he is really her boyfriend (the much wiser Dad couldn't care less, wanting his daughter to choose her own happiness. But Veronica is incapable of happiness. She wanders through the public psychiatric clinic like a catatonic, barely functional, and showing neither insight nor empathy for her poor, hapless patients. We are given no idea as to why she became a doctor or chose this specialty, for her disdain for it begins to show itself on her first day of work, and only grows worse with each passing day. Meanwhile, her two best friends can only babble on about the absence of men in their lives and merely urge Veronica to "snap out of it." Yeah. Anyone who has ever suffered from depression knows how helpful THAT phrase is (NOT)!!!! The movie ends with Papa hovering near death, Veronica feeling content with that because she bought him her childhood house as a present. She has somehow been promoted to work at a private hospital with a huge pay raise. We are given no clue as to whether this is going to help her escape from massive negative ennui. Ahhh, but the saving grace for many Brazilians appears to save the day: floating immersed in the Sea (capital letter essential), with thoughts of a nude orgy on the beach which may or may not be a memory or a fantasy, she tells herself something unmemorable, which gratefully releases us from her empty self. If you like that, you are welcome to it.
Sindre Kaspersen
Brazilian screenwriter and director Marcelo Gomes' fourth feature film which he wrote, premiered in the Contemporary World Cinema Section at the 37th Toronto International Film Festival in 2012, was screened in the Horizontes Latinos section at the 60th San Sebastián International Film Festival in 2012, was shot on location in Brazil and is a Brazil-France co-production which was produced by producers João Vieira Jr. and Sara Silveira. It tells the story about a woman named Verônica who lives in a Brazilian city with her father Jose. Verônica has recently gone from years of reading books about medicine to diagnosing people, but all though she has two good friends, a loving father and a romantic relationship, this transition makes her question her own personality.Finely and subtly directed by Brazilian filmmaker Marcelo Gomes, this quietly paced fictional tale which is narrated by the main character and mostly from her point of view, draws a mindful and intimate portrayal of a doctor's meetings with various people who comes to her with their problems and her relationship with herself, her father, her friends and her lover. While notable for it's naturalistic milieu depictions and fine cinematography by Brazilian cinematographer Mauro Pinheiro Jr., this character-driven and reflective drama about a woman who begins trying to diagnose herself and looking deeper into her own being after having finished her medical studies, depicts and internal study of character and contains a good score by composer Tomas Alves de Souza.This at times humorous, atmospheric and self-scrutinizing story which is set in the municipality and metropolitan of Recife in Brazil, is impelled and reinforced by it's cogent narrative structure, subtle character development and continuity and the commendable acting performances by Brazilian actress Hermila Guedes and Brazilian artist, actor and author W.J. Solha. A minimal, existentialistic and sensual fairy-tale.