Brazil erupted Sunday night when the movie I’m Still Here became the first Oscar winner in the country’s history — in the middle of national Carnival celebrations, no less.
The Oscar-winning film has reignited national discussions on the dictatorship. With the debate over amnesty resurfacing, ...
The film serves as a kind of historical reparation by winning the award after Central do Brasil, also by Walter Salles, lost ...
Brazil’s military dictatorship (1964–1985), has been hailed not only as a cinematic masterpiece but also as a powerful political statement against authoritarianism and state violence.
Fernanda Torres gives an outstanding performance as a woman whose husband disappears under Brazil’s repressive dictatorship ...
Jubilant celebrations erupted across Brazil early on March 3 as I’m Still Here (Ainda Estou Aqui) won the Academy Award for Best International Film.Directed by Walter Salles, the film is based on a ...
Brazil's National Bank for Economic and Social Development has approved R$32m (US$5.52m) in financing for Conspiração Filmes, one of the production companies behind Oscar-winning film Ainda Estou Aqui ...
LOS ÁNGELES (AP) — “Ainda estou aquí” (“Aún estoy aquí”) gana el Oscar a mejor película internacional. Got a question? Put a reporter on it. Ever think of a question that you wish ...
A crowd in Belo Horizonte erupted in celebration on March 3 as the Brazilian film I’m Still Here (Ainda Estou Aqui) was announced as the winner of the Oscar for Best International Film at the Academy ...
The Grammy winners will tour more than a dozen cities this spring to perform their soul ...
The film is based on a true story set in 1970s Rio de Janeiro, when Brazil was living under a military dictatorship.