Bald Mountain (film)

(Redirected from Serra Pelada (film))

Bald Mountain (Portuguese: Serra Pelada) is a 2013 Brazilian Western drama film co-written and directed by Heitor Dhalia, starring Juliano Cazarré, Júlio Andrade, Sophie Charlotte, Wagner Moura, and Matheus Nachtergaele.

Serra Pelada
Theatrical release poster
Directed byHeitor Dhalia
Written byHeitor Dhalia
Vera Egito
Produced byAndrezza de Faria
Wagner Moura
Tatiana Quintella
StarringJuliano Cazarré
Júlio Andrade
Sophie Charlotte
Wagner Moura
Matheus Nachtergaele
Edited byMárcio Hashimoto Soares
Music byAntonio Pinto
Production
company
Paranoid
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • 18 October 2013 (2013-10-18) (Brazil)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryBrazil
LanguagePortuguese
BudgetR$ 10 million[1]
Box office$1,908,156[2]

The film follows the story of two men in Serra Pelada, one of the largest mines in the world.[3]

Plot

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The friends Juliano (Juliano Cazarré) and Joaquim (Júlio Andrade) leave São Paulo in search of the dream of gold. The year is 1978. The two arrive at the Amazon jungle as so many other thousands of men arrived. Full of dreams and illusions. But life in the camp changes everything. The obsession with wealth and power destroys them. Juliano becomes a gangster. Joaquim leaves all his values behind.[4]

Cast

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Production

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Development

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The director Heitor Dhalia said to UOL that Serra Pelada was the hardest movie he ever made. "When I had the idea of the film, I thought: ' why had nobody thought of doing this movie before? ' And when I was filming I understood why. It was almost impossible to be done. It was very complex. It was the hardest film I've ever done".[1]

According to Dhalia, it was hard to tell the story of a camp which focused on men living in precarious conditions and facing orders from the owners of the operating areas. "We're talking about a fairly important Brazilian event of our recent history. The biggest gold rush of the modern era. Highest concentration of manual labor since the pyramids of Egypt, which had 4,000 men. In Serra Pelada there were around 100,000 men working".[5]

Filming

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The film was going to be shot in Pará, but ended up being filmed in Paulínia, São Paulo, after Vale and the Amazonian State Government denied support for the production.[1]

The producer Tatiana Quintella confirmed that Vale vetoed the filming in Pará, but explained that running the production there would be unworkable. "We had no budget for the logistics and security of our team. So we decided to shoot the film in São Paulo".[1]

References

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