Quilombo (1986)
Facts
| Directed by | Carlos Diegues |
| Cast | Joel Silva, Thiago Justino, Eduardo Machado, ArduĂno Colassanti and Antonio Pitanga |
| Theatrical Release | March 28, 1986 |
| DVD Release | September 27, 2005 |
| Running Time | 114 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 717119445546 |
| Buy this item | $26.99 at Amazon.com As of Aug 31 22:56 EDT (details) 1 DVD, New Yorker Video, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: Portuguese (Original Language) Or 11 new from $19.44, 7 used from $16.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Fight NOW and Die Brave or Live Life Later As A Slave!!!!!! |
| Brazilian Spartacus Depicted in Dazzling Colors and Music |
| Good on Historical Content But too Hollywood |
They were seen as savages because they possessed a great deal of power and refused to succumb to the powers that be that were using them to build their economic wealth. Perhaps if some of us could live like maroons, we can reflect on ourselves and help one another as they did. We can also challenge the power structure that continues to bring us down.
Although the movie was very interesting to watch, it was a bit Hollywood. The background music was too tropical for that period. July 9, 2005
| A tribute to freedom! |
The movie centers around two characters that have long lived in the collective memory of Afro-Brazilians for hundreds of years: Ganga Zumba and Zumbi, the former the spiritual leader of his new found nation, the latter the warrior who would resist fiercely the devastating assault unleashed upon the quilombo and its dwellers by a well-armed expeditionary force made up of portuguese troops, colonial regulars and Sao Paolo mercenaries.
'Quilombo' tells a story of defiance, courage, and the fighting spirit of formerly oppressed peoples who chose to die for their freedom rather than returning alive in chains to hell on earth, namely the sugar plantations of Pernambuco province. Palmares defied the Portuguese empire for almost a century, and represented a threat to the province's plantations because they were often raided and the slaves were freed.
For an attempt to publicize this epic era in Brazilian history, Diegues does a good job by putting together historical facts and magic realism. Though I would have loved to see more emphasis on the economic aspects of the quilombo. It is said that 'Palmares' had developed its own business schemes with free-lance merchants and local ranchers as well, creating also not only the threat of slave mutiny but the threat that presented the diversity in crops around the quilombo, which contrasted sharply with the monocultures, thus the economic interests of plantations.
All in all, 'Quilombo' is dramatic, thrilling, and beautiful. For those interested on history about maroon communities and slave resistance in the New World I truly encourage to get this movie.
September 28, 2004
| Brilliant |
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