BLACK GOD WHITE DEVIL
Director: Glauber
Rocha
Writers: Walter Lima
Jr., Glauber Rocha, and Paulo Gil Soares
Cast: Geraldo Del Rey
(Manuel) Yona Magalhaes (Rosa) Lidio Silva (Sebastian)
Country: Brazil
Release date: 1964
Aspect ratio: 4:3 PAL
Language: Portuguese
Shot in Sertao the arid north-eastern region of Brazil BLACK
GOD WHITE DEVIL tells the story of Manuel a poverty stricken cowhand hoping for
a miracle, his life takes a turn for the worst when he kills his corrupt an
abusive boss in a fit of rage.
His actions force him to flee his home after his boss’s
henchmen come after him. After his attempted capture goes horrible wrong including
the death of his mother he tells his wife “We have nothing to take but our
destiny” and so their journey begins.
As outlaws they
soon join up with self-proclaimed saint Sebastian who condones violence in the
name of god, and preached some very disturbing doctrines followed blindly by
his parishioners. Manuel soon becomes his lieutenant carrying out his every
whim in the vain hope he will one day be blessed when they reach their promised
land. A land only his wife believes dose not exist, her scepticism leads her to
be ostracized by the not just Sebastian’s followers but also by Manuel who is
compliant in the sacrifice of their baby son by Sebastian to rid Rosa of the
devil. This single act of infanticide then sets off chain events that lead
Manuel and his wife Rosa having to flee yet again when the assassin Corisco is hired
by a senior priest to assassinate Sebastian he accepts the job with a very
heavy heart, as he himself holds Sebastian in high esteem. But when Corisco
turns up to find this great man already dead he massacres the camp and turns
his attention to seeking out Manuel, pursuing him and his wife across the arid
deserts of Brazil. Not alone for long
they seek shelter in the arms of gang leader Antonio and his heavily depleted
gang. This is where the WHITE DEVIL in the title comes into play as Antonio
changes Manuel’s name to Satan. As he battles with his faith Manuel moves into
a life of crime as a member of Antonio’s gang who wages war on the wealthy
landowners viewing their crimes as part of the fight against the ruling classes
in the name of the oppressed, with Corisco in hot pursuit Manuel lives in
constant fear of capture.
As a visual experience the film takes its style from the
images of the Mexican Mural Movement the public arts movement from the1920’s
lead by Jose Orozco and Diego Rivera whose murals and paintings inspired by the
Russian socialist realism movement went on to document a generation. Glauber
Rocha use of these paintings as visual blueprints married with a washed out hand
held camera with its disjointed framing, experimental use of lighting,
extensive use of symbolism (the rotting horse carcass in the opening shots) the
most obvious use this visual prop was in the boulder scene where the messianic
preacher Sebastian has him carry a boulder up a hill, this scene is clearly
based on the Greek myth of Sisyphus who was condemned to a life of conducting
the meaningless task of pushing a boulder up a mountain then down again. Rocha
has taken the absurdity of the story and applied it to the question of belief and
what makes someone follow someone or something blindly with no real end in
sight just the repetitive act of pushing a metaphorical boulder up and down a
hill searching for meaning and clarity.
This idea is brought sharper into focus with the amazing folk
sound track with the folk singer acting as a narrator as he lyrically charts
the fortunes Manuel and Rosa and their journey to find their destiny. With the
stirring melodies of Bach the atmospheric sound design which detaches and
reattaches to the image, and on many occasions allowing sentences to just hang
in air. The beauty of this style is what feels like out of sequence sound
editing is in fact the abstract sound mixes and the magnification of the
ambient sound married with direct sound that gives the film a surrealist bend
that intensifies the spiritual elements of the film eluding to emotions that
couldn’t be reproduced in pictures. These creative touches became the staple
diet of what became know as CINEMA NOVO. A Brazilian filmmaking movement who
were heavily influenced by the Italian Neorealist cinema (which was also a
strong creative influence for the French New Wave film movement) lead by the
great Federico Fellini and Roberto Rossellini where religious humanism
communism and poetic realism feature heavily in their work. These themes make
regular appearances in the CINEMA NOVE films within a Brazilian and Portuguesa
context. Many of Glauber Rocha films deal with class conflict and social
inequality mixing none verbal representation with cultural symbolism, the
brooding man with the silent women looking on with a powerless sense of
frustration. Rocha’s follow up to BLACK GOD WHITE DEVIL was ANTONIO DAS MORTES in
1969 also known as THE DRAGON OF EVIL AGAINST THE WARRIOR SAINT. A continuation
of the historical tale of class conflict set against the arid backdrop of the
Brazilian Sertao in theatre of absurdities.
Brazilian film history is littered with these little gems, so get
digging you never know what you might find.
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