Fernanda Torres gives an outstanding performance as a woman whose husband disappears under Brazil’s repressive dictatorship ...
We've had decades of movies about fascism, but "I'm Still Here" demonstrates that they now hit home in a newly chilling way.
The scene captures Brazil’s approach to the legacy of its dictatorship, which ruled from 1964 to 1985. Unlike in Argentina, ...
In I’m Still Here, one Brazilian clan’s confrontation with the military dictatorship dramatizes the last half-century of Brazil’s democratic travails.
Just like Britain’s ‘stiff upper lip’, that indominable spirit in the face of adversity, Brazil has a dominant personality ...
I’m Still Here,” “No Other Land,” “Presence” and the latest “Bridget Jones” make our evolving list of 2025’s best films.
It's also already impressing on its preview run in the UK and Ireland with sold-out screenings at London's BFI Southbank and ...
Yet the sky is blue, and the beaches full. And facing the sands in Rio is the loud and loving home of genial former congressman Rubens Paiva and his wife Eunice (Selton Mello and Fernanda Torres ...
A radiant Rio de Janeiro, bathed in sunlight and carried by the ocean breeze. The beach is full of life—children run across ...
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In 1971, engineer and former congressman Rubens Paiva (Selton Mello) enjoys a prosperous life in Rio de Janeiro, sharing a beachside house with his wife Eunice (Fernanda Torres) and five children.
I'm Still Here also chronicles harrowing real-life events in the 1970s, this time focusing on civil engineer and former politician Rubens Paiva (Selton Mello), his wife Eunice (Fernanda Torres ...