Who Made the Knives in the Movie High Art

1991 motion picture directed by Walter Salles

A Grande Arte
A Grande Arte - dvd cover.jpg

DVD cover

Directed past Walter Salles Jr.
Screenplay by Rubem Fonesca
Matthew Chapman (English version)
Based on A Grande Arte by Rubem Fonesca
Produced past Paulo Carlos De Brito
Alberto Flaksman
Starring Peter Coyote
Tchéky Karyo
Amanda Pays
Raul Cortez
Cinematography José Roberto Eliezer
Edited by Isabelle Rathery
Music by Todd Boekelheide
Jürgen Knieper

Product
companies

Alpha Filmes
J&G Entertainment

Distributed by Miramax Films (U.S. Theatrical)

Release date

  • June 1991 (1991-06) (Noir in Festival)

Running time

104 minutes (Espana)
99 minutes (U.S. Video)
Country Brazil
Languages English language
Portuguese
Castilian
Box office $356,825 (USA)

A Grande Arte (in English, The Great Art; US championship: Exposure ), is a 1991 Brazilian picture show directed past Walter Salles Jr. and starring Peter Coyote. Loosely based on the book A Grande Arte by Brazilian Rubem Fonseca, information technology is one of the first theatrical works of Salles Jr. The cast includes Brazilian and international stars such as Coyote, Tchéky Karyo and Amanda Pays.

Plot [edit]

Peter Mandrake (Coyote), an American photographer in Brazil, is preparing an in loco essay for his new book, about the "Train Surfers" (groups of boys who court danger "surfing" on the roof of the trains) in the urban center of Rio de Janeiro. A local phone call daughter with whom he is friends is murdered, and when the police can make no progress Mandrake decides to investigate himself. Subsequently, two hired thugs interruption into his flat demanding a deejay, and, when he doesn't produce information technology because he can't do so, they rape his girlfriend and stab him, leaving him to dice. Vowing revenge, Mandrake enlists the help of Hermes (Karyo), a professional person knife fighter who owes Mandrake a debt, to teach him the art of knife fighting. The obsession this develops into causes Mandrake's girlfriend to get out him, wanting the whole matter to merely go away, but Mandrake refuses to permit go.

The thugs are discovered to be working for an undisclosed Brazilian criminal arrangement closely tied with the Bolivian cocaine cartel. The head of the organization is attempting to uncover a traitor in his organization, who apparently stole a floppy deejay containing of import information. Mandrake allies himself with some of the organization's rivals to help them discover the disk, in return for discovering who killed the call girl. The deejay is ultimately establish, and Mandrake learns that the organization head murdered the call girl himself, slashing her confront in an act of arrogance. Hermes appears all of a sudden, and the caput orders him to kill Mandrake, but Hermes tells him to practise it himself before leaving. They violently fight, and Mandrake manages to stab his opponent to expiry.

Even so, the fulfillment of his revenge quest leaves Mandrake feeling empty and without purpose. He wanders for a while before, on a whim, taking a pic of a couple kissing in a window. This reinvigorates his passion for photography, and, whereas he used to have pictures of violent and dangerous situations, at present his work has a theme of love and elementary pleasures. He heads out to the plains to see his girlfriend, who is an archaeologist working on-site. After showing her the pictures, he tells her he'south been assigned to Africa, but promises to return someday.

Pocketknife culture [edit]

The film explores the mysterious and subconscious globe of the "Persevs" (a portmanteau of the words perforate and sever) fighters and some famous knifesmiths, such as Rex Applegate and William. E. Fairbairn, Bo Randall (whose assault knife "Randall 14" is a primal weapon in the movie) and Joe Kious.

Cast [edit]

  • Peter Coyote equally Peter Mandrake, the photographer
  • Tchéky Karyo as Hermes, the knife fight primary
  • Amanda Pays as Mariet, Mandrake's girlfriend
  • Raul Cortez as Thales de Lima Prado
  • Giulia Gam equally Gisela the hooker
  • Tonico Pereira as Rafael
  • Eduardo Conde as Roberto Mitry
  • Miguel Ángel Fuentes equally Camilo Fuentes

Product [edit]

The movie was filmed on location on Rio de Janeiro streets (unremarkably at night) and in the highlands of Bolivia and Pantanal. It was the kickoff characteristic film directed past Walter Salles Jr., who had been known primarily for his documentaries. He later directed films such as Diários de Motocicleta (The Motorbike Diaries) and the horror remake Dark Water.

External links [edit]

  • A Grande Arte at IMDb
  • A Grande Arte at Rotten Tomatoes

fordwisford.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Grande_Arte

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