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Favela Rising, 2005

Favela Rising

Portuguese

Brazil, USA

Rating:7.0
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Profile of Favela Rising

The mood of Favela Rising is bleak and sincere. The plot centers around going straight, juvenile delinquency, and social decay. It is a foreign movie. Stylistically, Favela Rising features martial arts. In approach, it is serious and realistic. The pacing is slow. Favela Rising is set in Rio De Janeiro. It happens in contemporary times. The musical score is hip hop.

Summary of Favela Rising

Jeff Zimbalist and Matt Mochary's documentary is a major achievement in nonfiction filmmaking, a vibrant, important work that is as inspiring as it is tragic. The narrative centers on Anderson Sá, a distinguished-looking young man who grew up in the worst of Rio di Janiero's infamously violent favelas, Vigário Geral. Though most residents of this extremely impoverished community do their best to cobble together a piecemeal living, the neighborhood is ruled over by murderous drug lords, whose average age of death is between 14 and 25 years old. In 1993, after one of these men murdered a few notoriously corrupt cops, the military police retaliated by brutally, and randomly, murdering 21 innocent favela residents. One of these victims was Sá's younger brother. Rather than allow the anger and despair to propel him into a place of darkness and revenge, Sá decided to stop the cycle of violence, using the universal language of music as his conduit to social awareness and rebellion. Mobilizing like-minded friends and musicians, he started a newsletter and a band to perform his upbeat, yet courageously honest music, which featured lyrics about the massacre and police brutality. The filmmakers track Sá's project as it evolves from a small newsletter to a bona fide national music, with childhood musical education being a top priority.

Beautifully shot, with visually stunning graphic elements added, Favela Rising brings vibrance and color to one of the most downtrodden settings on earth, imbuing its people with honor. The access the filmmakers got to the residents, from regular families to masked men with machine guns, is incredible. In the end though, it is the music that is the real star of the show, which demonstrates the truly remarkable power of song and rhythm to transform lives.

Details

Language: Portuguese
Country: Brazil, USA
Release date: 24 April 2005
Runtime: 80 min

Cast and Crew

Anderson Sa

as Himself

Andre Luis Azevedo

as Himself

Critics Reviews

San Francisco Chronicle
For all its drive and passion, Favela Rising is an uneven, spasmodic film.
TV Guide
The larger message remains clear: Unified communities have more power than they realize, and the most vicious enemy of progress is learned helplessness.
Likely to see
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