Jornal da Mostra
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Edição:
Renata de Almeida e Leon Cakoff
Pedro Costa gains in visibility for his radical film making
Pedro Costa`s film making brings a parallel world into view, that is invisible to the hasty eyes of progress - time for the characters and time in real life. To make no concessions to superficiality in film making is the hallmark of this unique Portuguese film maker. Cape Verde immigrants have always exerted a fascination over the director, ever aware of their problems. What we find in "Juventude em Marcha" is touching solidarity, a pilgrimage through hovels about to be demolished, as though the inhabitants were also about to disappear.
The community gradually move the shanty-town dwellers to clean, new, simple quarters, into apartments. We follow along with the yearnings of Ventura, a brick-layer recently abandoned by his wife Clotilde, as he searches high and low for her, from one friend`s house to another, meanwhile mistaking everyone for his own children. Each plane in this film is impressive and precious. The light we see invariably fills the settings with dramatic effects of its own, with a special contribution. The planes are long, the dialog quiet: the photography in each sequence, in each frame, can be appreciated, explored, unhurriedly. Finally, we are witness to a love letter that Ventura quotes from memory, off the cuff - a letter that will never be written, but that we also will store away in our memories as a poem of hope for better days ahead and for a re-encounter with distant love.
"Sometimes I am afraid of building these walls", says the brick-layer to his
beloved in the imaginary letter. "Me with a trowel and cement, and you with
your silence." Silence from so many of us, Pedro
Costa would seem to suggest - silence in face of so many social tragedies
that the drama of immigration unleashes worldwide.
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