Uma jovem deixa o estado de Minas Gerais, para tentar se tornar cantora no Rio de Janeiro.Uma jovem deixa o estado de Minas Gerais, para tentar se tornar cantora no Rio de Janeiro.Uma jovem deixa o estado de Minas Gerais, para tentar se tornar cantora no Rio de Janeiro.
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
Maria Zilda Bethlem
- Bia
- (as Maria Zilda)
Arthur Muhlenberg
- Deca
- (as Artur Muhlenberg)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesCast members Cazuza and Lauro Corona had such a striking resemblance to each other that many people think they were brothers in real life. On a sad note, both died at the age of 32 from complications of AIDS in less than one year from each other (Corona on 20 July, 1989 and Cazuza on 9 July, 1990).
Avaliação em destaque
Here's a fun story about a young girl (Débora Bloch) who moves to the big city of Rio de Janeiro to become a singer and discovering
the Brazilian pop/rock scene of the early 1980's, finding some troubles and some love on her path to fame and glory.
"Bete Balanço" ("Swingin' Betty") is the typical 'star is born' kind of flick , with tolerable cliches as it presents a colorful and enthusiastic view of beautiful Rio, the musical scene that dominated the period with countless successful bands and artists becoming the heat of the moment, and a few of them like Cazuza and Barão Vermelho appear as themselves. Add to the mix Débora, Diogo Vilela, Lauro Corona, Maria Zilda Bethlem, Hugo Carvana and Arthur Muhlenberg and the result obtained by director Lael Rodrigues makes of "Bete Balanço" a nostalgic film with plenty of charm, good humor and fun moments all around.
Won't say the story was fully captivating as it loses itself with a weak subplot revolving on street violence where the photographer Rodrigo (Corona) investigates the lynching of street urchins by some important people, and strange as everything already is, that's how he and Bete meet each other. He makes a daring photo exhibition from that moment, but later on that moment never caught up with him, and we're already expecting some danger coming to the couple. The subplot is relevant for its period, and the social denouncement is valid but it just doesn't sustain itself in this particular film.
Another point of contention comes from the singing bits, and since the film is about a wannabe singer, it doesn't convince or seduce much having Débora in such role as she doesn't much of a singing voice. The studio rehearsal and the duet with Cazuza were nice, but far from being potential songs that could become a single such as the title track (more famous than the film itself).
Yet I really liked this film. It's one of those summer stories with positive characters and positive spirits, many flights of imagination coming from the lead character dreaming of fame and making spectacular music videos. And it's one of those rare opportunities to see Lauro Corona on film, as he only made this one and the superb "O Sonho Não Acabou", and he was more well-known for soap opera works during the period. He was an electrifying presence on screen, very talented but left us too soon (hoping to see re-runs from his TV shows). To see him sharing the screen with his "twin" brother Cazuza was amazingly bittersweet. 8/10.
"Bete Balanço" ("Swingin' Betty") is the typical 'star is born' kind of flick , with tolerable cliches as it presents a colorful and enthusiastic view of beautiful Rio, the musical scene that dominated the period with countless successful bands and artists becoming the heat of the moment, and a few of them like Cazuza and Barão Vermelho appear as themselves. Add to the mix Débora, Diogo Vilela, Lauro Corona, Maria Zilda Bethlem, Hugo Carvana and Arthur Muhlenberg and the result obtained by director Lael Rodrigues makes of "Bete Balanço" a nostalgic film with plenty of charm, good humor and fun moments all around.
Won't say the story was fully captivating as it loses itself with a weak subplot revolving on street violence where the photographer Rodrigo (Corona) investigates the lynching of street urchins by some important people, and strange as everything already is, that's how he and Bete meet each other. He makes a daring photo exhibition from that moment, but later on that moment never caught up with him, and we're already expecting some danger coming to the couple. The subplot is relevant for its period, and the social denouncement is valid but it just doesn't sustain itself in this particular film.
Another point of contention comes from the singing bits, and since the film is about a wannabe singer, it doesn't convince or seduce much having Débora in such role as she doesn't much of a singing voice. The studio rehearsal and the duet with Cazuza were nice, but far from being potential songs that could become a single such as the title track (more famous than the film itself).
Yet I really liked this film. It's one of those summer stories with positive characters and positive spirits, many flights of imagination coming from the lead character dreaming of fame and making spectacular music videos. And it's one of those rare opportunities to see Lauro Corona on film, as he only made this one and the superb "O Sonho Não Acabou", and he was more well-known for soap opera works during the period. He was an electrifying presence on screen, very talented but left us too soon (hoping to see re-runs from his TV shows). To see him sharing the screen with his "twin" brother Cazuza was amazingly bittersweet. 8/10.
- Rodrigo_Amaro
- 19 de abr. de 2024
- Link permanente
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 14 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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Principal brecha
By what name was Bete Balanço (1984) officially released in Canada in English?
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