Mango Yellow (2002) Brazil
Mango Yellow Image Cover
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Director:Assis, Cláudio, Bloch, Jonas, Cavalli, Leona, Díaz, Chico, Nachtergaele, Matheus, Paes, Dira
Studio:Olhos de Cão Produções Cinematográficas
Writer:Hilton Lacerda
Rating:6.3 (772 votes)
Date Added:2012-06-05
ASIN:720229911481
Awards:24 wins & 17 nominations
Genre:Portuguese films
IMDb:0333074
Duration:1:40:00
Aspect Ratio:2.35 : 1
Sound:Dolby Digital
Languages:Portuguese
Subtitles:English
LAC code:300009556
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Assis, Cláudio, Bloch, Jonas, Cavalli, Leona, Díaz, Chico, Nachtergaele, Matheus, Paes, Dira  ...  (Director)
Hilton Lacerda  ...  (Writer)
 
Matheus Nachtergaele  ...  Dunga
Jonas Bloch  ...  Isaac
Leona Cavalli  ...  Lígia
Dira Paes  ...  Kika
Chico Díaz  ...  Wellinton Kanibal
Conceição Camaroti  ...  Aurora
Magdale Alves  ...  Dayse
Jones Melo  ...  Padre
Taveira Júnior  ...  Taxi Driver
Everaldo Pontes  ...  
Cosme Soares  ...  
Comments: DPORT 07

Summary: {Best Film -- 2003 Tolouse Latin American Film Festival}{C.I.C.A.E. Award -- Forum of New Cinema, IFF Berlin 2003}{APCA Trophy -- São Paulo Association of Art Critics Awards 2004}Wellington (Chico Díaz) is a butcher in a slaughterhouse. His wife, Kika (Dira Paes), is a devout evangelical, given to wearing covered up clothing in a tropical city where skin is casually exposed all around. Wellington values his wife's religious conviction because it assures him of her fidelity, even as he carries on an affair with another woman.Wellington delivers meat to the seedy Texas Hotel, whose flamboyantly gay cook, Dunga (Matheus Nachtergaele), lusts after the butcher to no avail. Aurora, an older resident of the hotel, is an asthmatic hooked on her oxygen tank, overweight, and terrified of the loneliness she suffers. Nearby, at a cafe, Ligia (Leona Cavalli), the barkeep, flaunts her sexuality even as she fights off the constant physical advances of the scruffy customers. One of those, Isaac, referred to as "the German," is obsessed with death, and buys bodies of newly deceased.As the intertwined destinies of these "full dimensional people in touch with their explosive feelings" (New York Times) unfold, Assis offers a series of portraits of the people of this neighborhood--women and men, from children to the aged, of every shade of skin color. The hothouse atmosphere of Brazil comes alive in Mango Yellow, where lust and economic desperation combine in a volatile brew of provocative cinema.