Part of a triade of short films about the misadventures of good old João de Deus.
Time passes quietly for João de Deus, the eccentric alter ego of celebrated filmmaker João César Monteiro, as he returns home, observes a beautiful woman, and lingers his gaze over the city. Dominating the soundtrack are the voices of Joan Crawford and Sterling Hayden from a scene of Nicholas Ray’s classic western, Johnny Guitar. —aibohphobia
João César Monteiro (1939-2003) was born in Figueira da Foz, a cosmopolitan beach resort in Portugal and moved to Lisbon at the age of 15 where he continued his studies.
João César Monteiro remains among the most indelible and unusual figures in the history of Portuguese cinema, a visionary and profoundly eccentric filmmaker whose unique contribution to postwar European film is only gradually being recognized today. A cosmopolite imagination tethered by a provincial attachment to Lisbon, a libertine with an obscurely puritanical streak, an unrelenting aesthete guided by an archaic spirit – Monteiro was a deliberately contradictory and difficult artist who obdurately resisted affiliation with any declared “school” of filmmaking. Monteiro dedicated himself instead to a mode of sublimely, and often perversely, high modernism fascinated by a rich undercurrent between the cinema and the other arts – especially poetry, painting, theater, literature and music. Like the films of his… read more
I find it poetic in a way that cannot be defined. But maybe that has something to do with my love for Nick Ray's dialogue (and the Johnny Guitar tune).
available here : http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2k231_passeio-com-johnny-guitar-joaocesar_creation