Orfeu Negro Essay

839 Words2 Pages

Wilson Carneiro
Portuguese 306
Ricardo Vasconcelos
February 19, 2017
Everything Ends From Greece to Brazil, the myth of Orfeu came to the big screen by Marcel Camus, who decided to bring the plot to a Rio de Janeiro favela. Camus did not shy away from inundating his film with intense visuals and rhythmic abundance. "Orfeu Negro", a version of the tragic history of Greek mythology that tells how Orfeu loses his beloved Euridice, continues to fascinate audiences thanks to its colors and rhythm. The soundtrack is mainly of a rhythm that was beginning to gain strength — the Bossa Nova. Songs like "Felicidade" became world-wide successes that spread the jazz and the Brazilian samba mix. Almost immediately, Bossa Nova became a cult subject. Perhaps not everyone remembers the film, but the songs that accompanied it are universally acclaimed. This is because Camus decided that the music would be more of a protagonist of the story and, for that reason, developed the plot in the Rio carnival, while avoiding the real misery of life in the favelas. The plot of the movie is not its strong point. “Orfeu Negro” is a hard movie to characterize. The film is carried by a Brazilian combination of music with the city of Rio de Janeiro. Camus …show more content…

However, it is also certain that the next Carnaval is more awaited and savored the colder the Wednesday is. Happiness has an end, but sadness does too. We just cannot see this end when we were experiencing one or another feeling. The truth is that both feelings

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