Time and the Wind (2013) Poster

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6/10
Great landscapes, and that's about it.
thiago-lopes5925 October 2014
Monjardin's O Tempo e o Vento is visually astounding. It has really great angles, locations, costumes, and some not bad action going on. The problem here is the lack of character development. Every scene is about plot development. It all happens so fast and with so little exposition that it was hard for me to believe in some interactions between characters. But kudos to some of the acting though, mainly Montenegro, Pires and Lacerda. There's not much to say about the other actors, as we don't get to see them as much. I just gotta point out that child actors should be given proper direction. Seeing a little gaúcho kid talking like a carioca is a slap on the face of anyone who speaks Brazilian Portuguese. And you should know what happens when you slap a man on the face.
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8/10
Epic Tale, Ravishingly Photographed
l_rawjalaurence19 August 2016
Sometimes it's so pleasurable to pick up a movie that you know nothing about and find out that is is really memorable - for whatever reason.

Such is the case with O TEMPO E O VENTO (TIME AND THE WIND), an epic tale of familial struggle over a more than a century during Brazil's southern occupation. Knowing next to nothing about that country's history, I approached Jayme Monjardim's film cold, so to speak. Told by the now-elderly Bibiana Terra Cambará (Fernanda Montenegro), it retells a huge swathe of Brazilian history in terms of the regular cycles of birth, marriage, death, and the experience of colonization. While people often suffer at the hands of the Spanish, they manage to survive, and love springs eternal in their breasts. Bibliana's love for her husband Capitão Rodrigo Cambará (Thiago Lacerda) transcends time and space; even when he dies after having been shot in the back by a cowardly rival, her love for his memory never fades, as he appears in ghostly form beside her bed.

Some of the image-compositions are familiar from Technicolor Hollywood westerns of the Fifties - especially those of horses galloping across apparently endless landscapes. What renders TIME AND THE WIND so memorable is the stunning use of color from cinematographer Affonso Beato. Purples melt into oranges, blues and indigo; the skyline looks positively ravishing with an orb-like yellowish-orange sun setting in the distance; at dawn the sparse city of Santa Fe appears fresh, almost bluish as it welcomes in a new day; while the mountains protect the landscape from possible invasion.

The action proceeds slowly through a use of tracking shots accompanied by long shots showing the insignificance of the protagonists within the landscape. As Bibliana points out at the end, the wind might come and go, but time is inexorable; it is up to everyone to understand this inescapable fact of life and make the best of their limited presence on earth.

The story might be a familiar one, but it is compellingly told, aided by a wonderfully florid score from Alexandre Guerra. I do not know whether TIME AND THE WIND has been released anywhere outside Brazil, but I would strongly recommend anyone to take a look at it; they will not be disappointed.
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9/10
Great movie for a bigger book
miguel-nascim29 September 2013
Beautiful images, great acting, precise production design and a correct screenplay for a movie that works fine as short sight over the much superior story you find in the Erico Verissimo's masterpiece "O Tempo E O Vento".

In the Verissimo's epic story it is possible to discover multi-layers not only about the historic facts but also about the characters that are mixed to the real events. Such complexity is transformed in a fluid novel that makes the reader dive in a time it doesn't belong to as well as get to know the characters as they were close relatives.

You can see in the movie the respect for the story, but told in a quick pace it is possible to uncover only the surface of it. In this case it is less for the qualities of the movie and more for the grandness of the "O Tempo E O Vento".
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