Relato de un cierto oriente

Direction
Marcelo Gomes
Country
Brazil
Format
Feature film
Type
Fiction
Original title
Relato de un cierto oriente
Scenario
Marcelo Gomes

Marcelo Gomes

His contact with cinema started with a cine-club he created in his hometown, Recife. Later, he graduated in Film Studies at Bristol University. His first feature, Cinema, Aspirin and Vultures, premiered at Un Certain Regard, Cannes, in 2005 and received France’s Award of the Ministry of Education. In 2014 he presented at the Berlinale (Panorama) The Man of the Crowd, co-directed with Cao Guimaraes. His film Once upon a time was I, Veronica premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2012. In 2009 he presented I travel because I have to, I come back because I love you, co-directed with Karim Ainouz, at the Venice International Film Festival (Orizzonti). Marcelo Gomes has also collaborated in the scripts of other films: Madame Sat. (directed by Karim Ainouz), which premiered in Un Certain Regard at Cannes in 2002. He is currently working on his next feature film, Joaquim.

Note of intent

My decision to bring Milton Hatoum’s book to a wider audience through a film is mostly motivated by the issues raised in there. I want to reflect about otherness by depicting the encounter between different characters, different cultures, living in a peculiar place: the Amazon. The plot takes place in Manaus, a city marked by cross cultural exchange, diversity of customs, languages, and the coexistence of individuals of different nationalities. All of the inhabitants of Manaus exercise their ability to get along with alien people. An inner look at themselves allows to understand the differences with others. The other issue raised in the story is tolerance. This issue remains in the subtext of the entire movie, as Emily manages to build a life-long interreligious marriage in the middle of the Amazon.

Synopsis

Lebanon, 1950. Emilie and her brother Emir abandon the arid mountains of their homeland and head for the Brazilian Amazon region in search of better days. They take with them their sole possession and heirloom – a large wooden grandfather clock in which Emilie hides her secrets. They make their way to the port city of Trieste where they wait for a ship leaving for Brazil. While there, Emir falls in love with a local prostitute and doesn’t want to continue, but Emilie manages to convince him otherwise. The brother and sister disembark in cosmopolitan Manaus –  a city known for the pacific cohabitation of individuals from all nationalities and creeds. It is in this effervescent milieu that Emilie defies the catholic traditions of the Lebanese community and falls in love with Abbas, a Muslim storeowner with whom she settles down and builds a new family. The movie relates the saga of this family, its trials and tribulations, hopes, joys, tragedies and disillusions as seen revolving around Emilie: an enigmatic woman who believed love was the only weapon she had in which to overcome cultural differences.

Objectives sought in Films in Development

Minority partner, financing.

Budget
USD 2.0 M
Production
Rec Productores
Biographie producteur.ice

Ernesto Soto Canny is a journalist and producer. Graduated from Northwestern University (Chicago) and Navarra (Spain). He has worked as an executive producer of several documentaries and animation series, including The Time Compass, a Spanish TV series distributed in over 22 countries. After more than 10 years based in Barcelona, Spain, in 2015 he founded Sao Paulo-based production company Misti Filmes. In collaboration with REC Produtores Associados he has worked as an executive producer for Marcelo Gomes’most recent feature film, Joaquim (to be released in 2017).