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Porto da minha infância / um filme documentário de Maoel de Oliveira.

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Independent World Cinema: Classic and Contemporary Film. Available online

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Format:
Video
Contributor:
Oliveira, Manoel de, 1908-2015, filmmaker.
Alexander Street Press.
Madragoa Filmes (Firm), production company.
Gémini Films, production company.
Language:
Portuguese
Subjects (All):
Oliveira, Manoel de, 1908-2015--Childhood and youth.
Oliveira, Manoel de.
Oliveira, Manoel de, 1908-2015--Homes and haunts--Portugal--Porto.
Oliveira, Manoel de, 1908-2015.
Motion picture producers and directors--Portugal--Biography.
Motion picture producers and directors.
Porto (Portugal)--History.
Porto (Portugal).
Portugal.
Portugal--Porto.
Genre:
Feature films.
Biographical films.
Biographies.
Video recordings.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (58 minutes)
Other Title:
Oporto of my dreams
Oporto of my Childhood
Place of Publication:
Harrington Park, NJ : Milestone Films, 2001.
Language Note:
In Portuguese ; with English subtitles.
System Details:
data file
Summary:
With the freedom of inspiration and the rigor of writing that are his trademarks, Manoel de Oliveira returns to Oporto, the city of his birth. The Oporto of this childhood is a city laden with history, a city of artists and thinkers. And, as in a spiral movement, the film moves from the ruins of the house of his birth to the city of Oporto, to the whole society. Oporto is also the city that saw the birth, after 1896, of cinema in Portugal ... Oporto of my Childhood is the film of a search: fragments of memories, footprints, testimonies, marks, bands of the time, song lyrics, photographs. Images of an identification that is sometimes uncertain. "This Proustian documentary, made when Oliveira was 93 years old, explores the great Portuguese film-maker's relationship with his home town, Oporto, the place which inspired his first film Douro, Faina Fluvial way back in 1931. Using old photographs and newsreels with dramatic reconstructions, he offers a vivid portrait of a city caught between the old and the new. When he was a child, Oporto didn't even have proper cinemas, film shows were improvised in sheds, Oliveira (born 1908) recalls. Most of the landmarks familiar from his youth have vanished. The brothels and cafés where he and his artist friends used to while away their days are long since closed. Even the house where he grew up is in ruins. The city I remember only remains alive in my sad memory, he sadly reflects. Poignant and playful, this is one of the old master's most accessible late films." -- Time Out.
Notes:
Title from resource description page (viewed January 03, 2017).
Won 2001 Venice Film Festival, UNESCO Award
OCLC:
971285187
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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