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Alberto Cavalcanti

Alberto Cavalcanti

Upon his return to Brazil, Cavalcanti helped set up, and headed, Vera Cruz Studios. His attempt to forge a new Brazilian Cinema, free of American dominance, was sabotaged when he was denounced as a communist. The model for the studio as well was also perhaps too influenced by Hollywood paradigms to succeed in another culture and without sufficient bankrolling. Despite losing his job Cavalcanti managed to make several more films, most impressively the bitter and lyrical "Song of the Sea" (1954). Upon returning to Europe he directed the highly regarded "Herr Puntilla und sein Knecht Matti" (1955), co-written with Bertolt Brecht. Though Cavalcanti's is a genuine talent and a significant contribution to world cinema, the diversity of his interests has lessened the impact of his career as a whole. The fact that he worked in so many countries and in so many languages by itself means than his oeuvre has been little studied; though many of his individuals films deservedly remain highly respected, Cavalcanti himself has thus far eluded the writings of standardized, often limited, film histories.
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