José and Roberto are friends, and they decide to go hunting but without guns, so that no accident will happen. As they stroll and talk, one of them falls into a hole in a hidden marshland. His friend runs away, and manages to gather a number of men that were in the vicinity. They form a human chain to pull the victim out, but their affliction mounts, as they have no strategy for doing it, and they can’t understand each other. —IMDb
Manoel Cândido Pinto de Oliveira, GCSE (Portuguese pronunciation: [mɐnuˈɛɫ doliˈvɐjɾɐ]; born December 11, 1908) is a Portuguese film director born in Cedofeita, Porto. He is currently the oldest active film director in the world.
Manoel de Oliveira was born in Porto, Portugal on December 11, 1908, to Francisco José de Oliveira and Cândida Ferreira Pinto. His family were wealthy industrialists.
Oliveira attended school in Galicia, Spain and his goal as a teenager was to become an actor. He enrolled in Italian film-maker Rino Lupo’s acting school at age 20, but later changed his mind when he saw Walther Ruttmann’s documentary Berlin: Symphony of a City. This prompted him to direct his first film, also a documentary, titled Douro, Faina Fluvial (1931).
He also has the distinction of having acted in the second Portuguese sound film, A Canção de Lisboa (1933).
His first feature film came much later, in 1942. Aniki-Bóbó, a portrait of Oporto’s street children… read more
"Em 1963, quando A Caça foi presente à Censura, o filme terminava com a morte de José. Os censores acharam esse final muito pessimista e colocaram a Oliveira o dilema: ou o filme não passava, ou Oliveira filmava mais um plano em que o rapaz, afinal, se salvava.'' Hoje em dia nota-se que a morte dele no filme não teria o tal impacto como antigamente. É estranha a diferença destes tempos. Mentalidades.
Um ensaio sobre a natureza humana.
A CAÇA não é o Oliveira a que estamos habituados, pelo menos dos tempos recentes. É uma fita mais dinâmica, com maior forma e um conteúdo… read review