Behind the Sun (2001)
Director: Walter Salles
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
The arid badlands of Bahia, northern Brazil, in 1910. Among those subsisting off the sugarcane are the Breves: rigid authoritarian patriarch (Dumont), long-suffering but loyal wife (Assemany), young Pacu (Lacerda) and 20-year-old Tonho (Santoro) - unlikely to see 21, given the age-old feud between his family and the Ferreiras, who just slew his elder brother. Age-old notions of honour dictate the eldest son take revenge, thus ensuring the deadly cycle endures. So assured, bold, harmonious and fertile a mix of form and content is Salles' follow-up to Central Station, you'd never guess it was taken from an Albanian novel about Balkan animosities. Transposing the tale to his own country's harshest region at a time when farmers' feuds were rife, Salles uses the milieu not only to assemble some astonishingly luscious images, but to reflect on the relationship of economics and tradition to individual freedom. At the same time, by highlighting ritual and metaphor, he inflects the narrative (in its essential dynamics not unlike a Western) with a poetic clarity and richness reminiscent of Greek tragedy and myth.Author: GA
Cast & crew
Director: Walter Salles
Producer: Arthur Cohn
Cast: José Dumont, Rodrigo Santoro, Rita Assemany, Luiz Carlos Vasconcelos, Flavia Marco Antonio, Ravi Ramos Lacerda, Caio Junqueira full cast
Duration: 92 mins
Most popular on this site
Features
A lion in winter
Frank Langella hits the sweet spot in Starting Out in the Evening.
Dog day evening
Back with a taut new crime film, Sidney Lumet has plenty more to give.
Kiss of death
Goran Dukic proves that romance never dies in Wristcutters: A Love Story.
Monster in law
Jacques Vergès, infamous defender of Nazis and bombers, takes the stand in Terror’s Advocate.
Optic nerve
The eyes have it in “Views from the Avant-Garde.”
King of New York
TONY finds much to crow about at the 45th New York Film Festival.




What do you think?
Post your review now