Brazil - BRAZZIL - Central do Brasil (Central Station) by Walter Salles Jr - Brazilian Film - Press Release - October 1998


Press Release
Brazzil
October 1998
Film

CENTRAL STATION

Synopsis

Dora (Fernanda Montenegro) is a retired school teacher who makes a living by writing letters for illiterate people passing through Rio de Janeiro's main train station, Central Station. Commuting to the city from impoverished suburbs, poor workers flock to her, hoping to contact lost family members, send love letters, or simply relate the harsh details of their lives. Dora charges the equivalent of a dollar per letter she writes and a dollar more if she is asked to mail it. Among her clients are Ana (Soia Lira) and her nine-year-old son Josué (Vinícius de Oliveira), who has a fierce desire to meet his father, whom he has never seen.

Hardened by the station's endless stream of desperate faces, Dora has worked out a peculiar daily routine, which incidentally helps her earn some extra money. Every night, she takes the subway home to her apartment in the suburbs. There, Dora and her neighbor Irene (Marília Pêra), also single and living alone, read aloud the letters Dora has written during the day. Those that are considered important—a few—are mailed, and the rest are tossed in the garbage. If the two women disagree, the letter goes into a drawer, to await later judgment. One of these letters in the drawer is Ana and Josué's.

But Dora's life is about to change dramatically. The next day, soon after Ana returns to Central Station with Josué and dictates a second letter to the boy's father, she is hit by a bus after leaving the station and dies. Left alone with no relatives in Rio, Josué wanders aimlessly around the station, until Dora decides to approach him.

At first, her interest in the boy is selfish: he could be a source of fast cash if sold off to a dubious adoption agency. But after realizing the dark fate that is likely to be in store for him, she reluctantly agrees to accompany Josué on a journey to find his father in Brazil's remote and undeveloped northeast.

Crossing a deserted geography, dotted by small towns overtaken by migrants, their journey becomes a quest for their own identities: one boy's search for his father, one woman's search for her heart.

* * *

Director Walter Salles
on "Central Station"

A Station Called Brazil. Few countries have suffered as many traumatic changes in the last thirty years as Brazil. A late industrialization created a huge wave of internal migration that, in turn, brought chaos to the cities, unprepared to accommodate so many new arrivals. The absence of land reform and successive droughts in the northern states led to a continuous exodus to the south of the country.

In the 1970's, millions of migrants from the northeast abandoned their homes, families and cultural traditions, attracted by the illusion of an economic miracle announced by the military government. But promises were unfulfilled, unemployment rates soared, and so did violence in the overpopulated Brazilian cities of the south.

In the beginning of the 90's, the country plunged even further into a state of chaos. After recently-elected President Collor announced an outrageous new plan to restructure the economy, more than 800,000 young Brazilians opted for exile, in search of the opportunity denied them in their homeland. For the first time since its discovery 500 years ago, Brazil became a country of emigration. This was the underlying theme of my previous film, "Foreign Land," about a generation in crisis, lost in a country which was, itself, unsure of its identity.

A few years have passed. We are now on the verge of a new century, and somehow, the country has matured. We know that the economic miracle that would immediately solve all our structural problems was a fallacy. We also know that mass exile is not a possible solution. We are finally confronted with ourselves, with what we really are, so distant from the image created by official statistics and by national television, entities that have both been so efficient in controlling and defining Brazil's recent past.

Today, an important quest is surfacing: the desire to find another country, one that may be simpler and less glorious than previously announced, but aims to be more compassionate and human. A country where the possibility of a certain innocence still remains.

This latent desire to rediscover a country, to redefine ourselves, coincides with the rebirth of Brazilian cinema, with the necessity to continue a cinematic tradition that was brutally interrupted for political and economic reasons—perhaps because it depicted faithfully what took place in Brazil, in contrast to what was shown on television.

"Central Station" aims to talk about this country searching for its own roots. This is a film about a boy wanting to find his own identity (Josué), but is also about people striving to maintain a contact with their past (the illiterate migrants who dictate letters to Dora).

The origin of the story. The film's core idea appeared after I directed a documentary called "Life Somewhere Else" ("Socorro Nobre"), based on the written correspondence between a half-literate prisoner and an elderly sculptor named Frans Krajcberg. The woman prisoner, sentenced to 36 years in jail, had found a reason to resist and survive her ordeal with the help of these letters that she wrote—and the responses she received from Krajcberg.

Having sensed how much one's life can change when a simple letter is received, I started to wonder what could happen if a letter did not get to its destination. . .

"Central Station's" main architecture was developed from this starting point, and a year later, its script received the "Cinema 100—the Sundance Institute International Award," granted by the Sundance Institute and NHK, as well as the "Fond Sud" grant from the French Ministry of Culture.

The Characters. Like many people who had to endure the harsh times of the last decades, Dora is a survivor. She has lost sight of most ethical and moral principles and makes ends meet with the help of unorthodox methods.

Josué has also been hardened by his own, although short, history. He represents the second generation of "nordestinos," migrants that believed in the official promises of a future in the south. He desires now to find the home and family he has never seen, inverting the exodus' axis and, thus, redefining his own story. Most of all, he desires to meet his father for the first time. And, in Portuguese, father—"pai"—and country—"país"—are almost the same word.

The Making of "Central Station." After the chaos that Brazil—and Brazilian cinema—endured in the early 90's, it was necessary to find a different manner to produce films. On this film and my previous one, half the crew had never worked in cinema before. With the exception of Fernanda Montenegro and Marília Pêra, the most respected actresses in Brazil, the majority of the actors were making their debuts, along with the art director, screenwriters, costume designer and casting director. The mixture of professionalism and experience from a part of the crew and the desire and enthusiasm of those that were discovering filmmaking made "Central Station" possible. More than that: it made filming this story an extremely enjoyable experience.

Like "Foreign Land," "Central Station" was rehearsed like a play before being filmed. Strange as it may seem, this process allows a lot of improvisation during the shoot. What you find on location can be easily compared to what you had in the rehearsal phase. To lock a road movie (or any film) before the shoot, before being influenced by a specific geography, is suicidal. . .

This blend of preparation and respect for on-the-spot intuition was vital for "Central Station." It also allowed us to finish the film before schedule, working within a specific budget, essential factors in independent production.

* * *
ABOUT THE CAST

Fernanda Montenegro (Dora)

Considered by many to be Brazil's greatest actress, Fernanda Montenegro (Dora) has acted in more than fifty plays (including works by O'Neill, Durenmatt and Fassbinder) and many feature films. In 1970, Montenegro received the Best Actress Award at the Moscow Film Festival for her role in Paulo Porto's "Em Família" (which also received the "Best Film" Award at Moscow). She later won the Best Actress Award at Italy's Taormina Film Festival (1977) for her role in "Tudo Bem," directed by Arnaldo Jabor, and starred in Leon Hirszman's "They Don't Wear Black-Tie," which won the Golden Lion at the 1980 Venice Film Festival. In 1983, Montenegro received the "Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres" from the French Ministry of Culture. Her other film credits are: "A Falecida" by Leon Hirszman, Suzana Amaral's "The Hour of the Star," and Carlos Diegues' "See This Song."

Marília Pêra (Irene)

Hailed as "one of the decade's (1980's) ten best actresses" by Pauline Kael, Marília Pêra (Irene) won the National Society of Film Critics award for Best Actress in 1982 for her role in Hector Babenco's acclaimed "Pixote," and has also received Best Actress awards at the Gramado Film Festival (Triple Award Winner) and at the Cartagena Film Festival for Carlos Diegues' "Better Days Ahead." Her other films include "Bar Esperanza," Paul Morrissey's "Mixed Blood," "Angels of the Night," "The Interview," and Carlos Diegues' "Tieta."

Vinícius de Oliveira (Josué)

Josué is Vinícius de Oliveira's first film role. He was ten years old when he approached director Walter Salles at the Rio de Janeiro Airport, where he worked as a shoeshine boy. Tested against more than 1500 other young actors for the role of Josué, his performance was so convincing that he was immediately given the part. A born actor, he proved extremely responsive to direction and demonstrated an amazing capacity to concentrate during the most demanding film scenes.

ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS

Walter Salles (Director)

Walter Salles' work, both as a documentary and fiction filmmaker centers around the theme of exile and the search for identity. His first feature film "Foreign Land," shot in 1995 and co-directed by Daniela Thomas, holds a crucial place in the renaissance of Brazilian cinema. The film won seven international prizes and has been selected by over thirty film festivals. It was named Best Film of the Year in Brazil in 1996, where it played theatrically for over six months. It was shown to great acclaim in the U.S. in 1997.

His documentaries, including "Life Somewhere Else" ("Socorro Nobre") and "Krajcberg, the Poet of the Remains," among others, have won awards in many international festivals, including the Fipa D'Or at the Festival International des Programmes Audio-Visuels, and the Best Documentary and the Public's Prize at the Festival dei Popoli in Italy.

Since completing "Central Station," which will have its world premiere at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival prior to its showing in competition at Berlin, Salles also directed "Minuit" (together with Daniela Thomas), a short film for the series "2000 Seen By. . ." for the French television station Arte.

Arthur Cohn (Producer)

Born in Basel, Switzerland, Arthur Cohn is the only film producer to win five Academy Awards. He received this unique honor for "The Sky Above, the Mud Below" (Best Documentary Feature, 1961), Vittorio De Sica's "The Garden of the Finzi-Continis" (Best Foreign Language Film, 1971), Jean-Jacques Annaud's "Black and White in Color" (Best Foreign Language Film, 1977) "Dangerous Moves" (Best Foreign Language Film, 1984) and Barbara Kopple's "American Dream" (Best Documentary Feature, 1990). In addition, Cohn was nominated in 1980 as producer of the documentary feature "The Yellow Star—The Persecution of the Jews in Europe 1933-45."

Arthur Cohn enjoyed a fruitful collaboration with Vittorio De Sica on such films as: `"Woman Times Seven," with Shirley MacLaine; "A Place for Lovers," with Faye Dunaway and Marcello Mastroianni; "Sunflower" with Sophia Loren and Mastroianni; and "A Brief Vacation," which was hailed as "Best European Picture of the Year." His other films include "Two Bits" with Al Pacino and the internationally hailed documentary drama "The Final Solution."

Arthur Cohn has been honored all over the world for his work. The American Film Institute has held retrospectives of his films in Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles and similar retrospectives were held in Hong Kong, Manila, Cairo, Jerusalem, Munich and many other festivals. He has a star on Hollywood Boulevard's Walk of Fame—an achievement usually reserved for Americans—and has also been honored with the proclamation of an "Arthur Cohn Day" by the Mayor of Los Angeles. In 1995, Cohn was awarded the France's "Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres," the highest order that a non-French citizen can receive.

An Arthur Cohn Production

CENTRAL STATION ("Central do Brasil")

A film by Walter Salles

Sundance Film Festival 1998 World Premiere

Showtimes at Sundance: Monday, January 19, 7:00 pm, Eccles Theatre Tuesday, January 20, 9:00 am, Park City Library Center

CENTRAL STATION

Credits

Directed by WALTER SALLES Producers ARTHUR COHN MARTINE DE CLERMONT-TONNERRE Executive Producers ELISA TOLOMELLI LILLIAN BIRNBAUM DONALD RANVAUD Associate Producer PAULO BRITO Screenplay JOÃO EMANUEL CARNEIRO MARCOS BERNSTEIN Based on an original idea by WALTER SALLES Director of Photography WALTER CARVALHO Editors ISABELLE RATHERY FELIPE LACERDA Production Designers CASSIO AMARANTE CARLA CAFFÉ Music ANTONIO PINTO JAQUES MORELEMBAUM Sound JEAN-CLAUDE BRISSON FRANÇOIS GROULT BRUNO TARRIERE Sound Recorder MARK A. VAN DER WILLIGEN Costumes CRISTINA CAMARGO Set Designer MONICA COSTA 1st Assistant Director KÁTIA LUND Continuity (Northeast) ADELINA PONTUAL Casting SÉRGIO MACHADO Production Coordinator BETO BRUNO Actors' Coach FÁTIMA TOLEDO Make-up ANTOINE GARABEDIAN

CENTRAL STATION

Cast

Dora FERNANDA MONTENEGRO Irene MARÍLIA PÊRA Josué VINÍCIUS DE OLIVEIRA Ana SOIA LIRA César OTHON BASTOS Pedrão OTÁVIO AUGUSTO Yolanda STELA FREITAS Isaías MATHEUS NACHTERGAELE Moisés CAIO JUNQUEIRA Dora's Clients (Rio) SOCORRO NOBRE MANOEL GOMES ROBERTO ANDRADE SHEYLA KENIA MALCON SOARES MARIA FERNANDES MARIA MARLENE CHRISANTO CAMARGO JORSEBÁ-SEBASTIÃO OLIVEIRA Religious Man SIDNEY ANTUNES Stall Owner JOSÉ PEDRO DA COSTA FILHO Young Prostitute (Letter Client) ESPERANÇA MOTTA Thief MARCELO CARNEIRO Walkman Owner MANULA-MANUEL JOSÉ NEVES Shoeshine PRETO DE LINHA João (Yolanda's husband) MÁRIO MENDES Man on the Bus GILDÁSIO LEITE Women on the Bus SÔNIA LEITE ESTELINA MOREIRA DA SILVA Bus Driver ZEZÃO PEREIRA Cashier FELÍCIA DE CASTRO Bené HARILDO DEDA Bené's Son MARCOS DE LIMA Waitress MARIA MENEZES "Lipstick" Woman TELMA CUNHA Pilgrim's Driver JOSÉ RAMOS Woman Singing on the Truck DONA LUZIA Pilgrim BERTHO FILHO Jessé's Son EDIVALDO LIMA Violeta ANTONIETA NORONHA Maria (Jessé's Wife) RITA ASSEMANY Jessé GIDEON ROSA Praying Woman DONA SEVERINA Praying Man JOÃO RODRIGUES Preacher NANEGO LIRA Singing Boy ANTÔNIO MARCOS Woman in the Picture IAMI REBOUÇAS Picture Stall Owner JOÃO BRAZ Dora's Clients (Northeast) ANTÔNIO DOS SANTOS PATRÍCIA BRÁS INGRID TRIGUEIRO INALDO SANTANA JOSÉ PEREIRA DA SILVA ELIANE SILVA CÍCERO SANTOS ANDRÉA ALBUQUERQUE EVERALDO PONTES Cashier DIOGO LOPES FILHO Man From the F-Street House FERNANDO FULCO

Additional Music

"Toada e Desafio" Written by Capiba Performed by Quinteto da Paraíba

"Preciso Me Encontrar" Written by Candela Performed by Cartola

"Mama Africa" Written by Chico Cesar Performed by Chico Cesar

"Ruínas da Babilônia" Written by Fauzi Beydoun Performed by Tribo de Jah

"É Deus por Nós" Written by Fátima Leão and Alexandre Neto Performed by Zezé Di Camargo e Luciano

Special thanks to: SUNDANCE INSTITUTE Michelle Satter, Geoffrey Gilmore, Frank Pierson, Joan Tewkesbury, Patricia Cardoso-Reneau

1998. 115 minutes. Color. In Portuguese with English subtitles


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