Young man leaves his job at a bank to devote himself to being a psychic.Young man leaves his job at a bank to devote himself to being a psychic.Young man leaves his job at a bank to devote himself to being a psychic.
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Thelma Reston
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- (as Telma Reston)
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- TriviaFirst feature film directed by Marco Altberg.
Featured review
This analysis might get a little lost in translation, confusing perhaps, as the designations existing when it comes to the spiritual
world and their interference/presence on a man's life was painfully confusing in "Prova de Fogo" ("Proof of Fire"), and only those with a
deep knowledge on the topics of medium, psychics and the umbanda religion will find a safeplace; but never a powerful film. I didn't like,
but there were honorable things in it to make me somewhat respect it.
Marco Altberg's directorial debut has its moments, but it certainly alienates inexperienced viewers with a mix of unintenional comedy and a lack of seriousness while telling the story of a hard-working young man (Pedro Paulo Rangel) who discovers his path in life when he receives spiritual sights and he tries to conduct a triple life as: a spiritual guide, a bank teller and a college student. He finds a purpose in life, helping others (but we never quite sure as to exactly how he helps) but he also cannot quit the physical things that can allow one to live: study and work.
Above the forementioned problem since I couldn't tell apart what he does with the umbanda (the works) and the spiritual guidance that had similar routines as spiritism has, what killed the movie was the lack of strong supporting characters, as if Mauro (the lead) was a completely empty person without anyone interesting around him, nothing but study and work and then he's hit by a shock of lightning, a terrifying but enlightning vision. The people who show up in his life are some women, one of them also a guide who falls in love with him but there's never an approach, she simply gives up; and a famous politician desperatly wanting to be state's governor - a very belivable scenario, but again not much of a payoff.
And many pointless sex scenes that try hard to have a point - except for the gay sadist who tortured a male friend of Mauro, and because of that there's a funny work at play. Speaking of the works, I did not see a seriousness in dealing with the rituals, the parties. I know the makers intentions in creating a serious work; but it looked funny and lame at times. And with characters poorly constructed and situations badly written, everything looked authentic but never interesting or worth seeing.
However, Mauro is a compelling character and it's a fine way to get to know the talent of a veteran like Rangel. You feel the pain and glory of a man destined to fulfill a higher purpose in life while balancing everything he did before. He doesn't reject what was known previously but he knows that keeping everything can collapse. Without guidance, he's just a common man; with help and learn, he finds a meaning and he's good with those new teachings. Not sure if I totally buy that this new life is what really mattered; probably the film's confusing presentation didn't allow me to comprehend the change, and if there were exact gains. 5/10.
Marco Altberg's directorial debut has its moments, but it certainly alienates inexperienced viewers with a mix of unintenional comedy and a lack of seriousness while telling the story of a hard-working young man (Pedro Paulo Rangel) who discovers his path in life when he receives spiritual sights and he tries to conduct a triple life as: a spiritual guide, a bank teller and a college student. He finds a purpose in life, helping others (but we never quite sure as to exactly how he helps) but he also cannot quit the physical things that can allow one to live: study and work.
Above the forementioned problem since I couldn't tell apart what he does with the umbanda (the works) and the spiritual guidance that had similar routines as spiritism has, what killed the movie was the lack of strong supporting characters, as if Mauro (the lead) was a completely empty person without anyone interesting around him, nothing but study and work and then he's hit by a shock of lightning, a terrifying but enlightning vision. The people who show up in his life are some women, one of them also a guide who falls in love with him but there's never an approach, she simply gives up; and a famous politician desperatly wanting to be state's governor - a very belivable scenario, but again not much of a payoff.
And many pointless sex scenes that try hard to have a point - except for the gay sadist who tortured a male friend of Mauro, and because of that there's a funny work at play. Speaking of the works, I did not see a seriousness in dealing with the rituals, the parties. I know the makers intentions in creating a serious work; but it looked funny and lame at times. And with characters poorly constructed and situations badly written, everything looked authentic but never interesting or worth seeing.
However, Mauro is a compelling character and it's a fine way to get to know the talent of a veteran like Rangel. You feel the pain and glory of a man destined to fulfill a higher purpose in life while balancing everything he did before. He doesn't reject what was known previously but he knows that keeping everything can collapse. Without guidance, he's just a common man; with help and learn, he finds a meaning and he's good with those new teachings. Not sure if I totally buy that this new life is what really mattered; probably the film's confusing presentation didn't allow me to comprehend the change, and if there were exact gains. 5/10.
- Rodrigo_Amaro
- Sep 25, 2024
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
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