Mutum (film)

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Directed bySandra Kogut
Screenplay by
  • Ana Luiza Martins Costa
  • Sandra Kogut
Based onnovelCampo Geral
by J. Guimarães Rosa
Produced by
  • Laurent Lavolé
  • Isabelle Pragier
  • Flávio R. Tambellini
Mutum
Directed bySandra Kogut
Screenplay by
  • Ana Luiza Martins Costa
  • Sandra Kogut
Based onnovelCampo Geral
by J. Guimarães Rosa
Produced by
  • Laurent Lavolé
  • Isabelle Pragier
  • Flávio R. Tambellini
CinematographyMauro Pinheiro Jr.
Edited bySérgio Mekler
Production
companies
Distributed by
  • VideoFilmes (Brazil)
  • Pierre Grise Distribution (France)
  • Global Film Initiative (North America)
  • Teleview International (Middle East)
Release date
Running time
95 minutes
Countries
  • Brazil
  • France
LanguagePortuguese

Mutum is a 2007 joint Brazilian/French drama film directed and co-written by Sandra Kogut.[1] The script, developed by Kogut and Ana Luísa Martins Costa, is loosely based on Guimarães Rosa's novella Campo Geral [pt].[2][3] The story takes place on an isolated farm in Mutum, in the sertão of Minas Gerais. The film represented Kogut's fiction feature debut.[4][5]

Wishing to create a fictional storyline based upon real world experiences, "Kogut spent more than a year in the Brazilian countryside, getting to know local farmers and their families' and then chose to cast her film from those communities.[4][5] As they were inexperienced, the lead child actors own names were used was to make character identification easier for them.[6]

Plot

Thiago (Thiago da Silva Mariz) and his family live on a remote farm in the isolated backlands of Minas Gerais, Brazil. The family consists of his brutish father (João Miguel), his weak and ineffectual mother (Izadora Fernandes), his friendly Uncle Terez (Romulus Braga), his grandmother (Maria das Graças Leal Macedo), and his four siblings - Felipe (Wallison Felipe Leal Barroso), Juliana (Maria Juliana Souza de Oliveira), Brenda (Brenda Luana Rodrigues Lima), and João (João Vitor Leal Barroso). During an intense argument between his mother and father, Thiago cringes as his father accuses her of infidelity. Later, grandmother bans the Uncle Terez from the family home. His brother Felipe hurts his foot, and through lacking proper medical care he gets sick and dies. His Uncle later confides that his father has killed a neighbor. Thiago is forced to confront separations and betrayal within the home, and slowly begins to understand as he faces and lets go of his childhood innocence.

Cast

With the exception of João Miguel, Izadora Fernandes, Rômulo Braga and Eduardo Moreira, the cast is composed of non-professional actors chosen by the director and scriptwriter from inhabitants of the sertão of Minas Gerais, where filming took place.[7]

Release

Mutum was well-received at multiple film festivals world-wide, and was eventually released in the United States as part of the Global Lens series, a series set to showcase international cinema and promote cross-cultural understanding.[4]

Reception

References

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