Cinderela Baiana
Cinderela Baiana | |
---|---|
VHS cover | |
Directed by | Conrado Sanchez |
Produced by | Antônio Polo Galante |
Screenplay by | Conrado Sanchez (uncredited) |
Starring |
Carla Perez Perry Salles Alexandre Pires Lázaro Ramos Lucci Ferreira Armindo Bião Juliana Calil |
Cinematography | Conrado Sanchez |
Edited by | Éder Mazzini |
Distributed by | PlayArte |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | Brazil |
Language | Portuguese |
Cinderela Baiana[nb 1] (Portuguese for Bahian Cinderella) is a 1998 Brazilian semi-fictionalized biographical romantic comedy film directed by Conrado Sanchez (who also wrote the screenplay, even though he was uncredited for it) and produced by Antônio Polo Galante. It is a heavily fictionalized biography of dancer Carla Perez, famous for being a former member of axé group É o Tchan!. The film is noted for being the debuts of Perez, then-unknown actors Lázaro Ramos and Lucci Ferreira, and musician Alexandre Pires (frontman of samba group Só Pra Contrariar and Carla Perez's then-boyfriend) on a feature film, and also counts with cameos by singers Netinho and Cátia Guimma, portraying themselves.
Cinderela Baiana was a box office bomb, and was critically panned upon its release; to this day it is considered to be the worst film to be ever made by the Brazilian film industry.
Plot
Carla Perez (portrayed by Carla Fabianny as a child and by herself as an adult) lives with her father Raimundo (Armindo Bião) and unnamed tuberculous mother (Juliana Calil) in a small, poor shack located somewhere in the middle of the sertão of Bahia. After her mother dies, Carla and her father decide to move to Salvador in order to achieve better life conditions. Carla, having an innate talent for dancing, soon is spotted by zany talent manager Pierre (Perry Salles) and his personal assistant Beto (Josevaldo Oliveira); she is initially enthusiastic about her newly acquired fame, but soon discovers Pierre is an unscrupulous man that is only interested into the profits of exploiting her. Helped by her two vagabond friends, Bucha (Lucci Ferreira) and Chico (Lázaro Ramos), and by her boyfriend, Alexandre Pires (portrayed by himself), she garners the strength to fight Pierre back and live freely as she wishes.
Critical reception
The film was lambasted by critics and the public alike, who criticized Carla Perez's lackluster and amateurish performance, the clichéd plot (which was compared by a critic to a "poor man's rip-off of Pretty Woman"), several narrative inconsistencies and Perry Salles' ridiculously over-the-top acting as Pierre.[1] It holds a score of 2.3 out of 10 at the Internet Movie Database and of 2 out of 5 at Filmow, based on 741 votes.[2] Carla Perez announced in 2008 that she had disowned the film, saying that she "regretted it as an actress",[3] and it was ultimately withdrawn from circulation a couple of years after its release; thus being, physical copies of the film are extremely rare and very difficult to obtain.[4] However, it has found its way to survive via file-sharing websites, being uploaded in its entirety to YouTube on January 30, 2013.[5] The film has acquired a small cult following, with excerpts of it being widely used as a source for YouTube Poops in Brazil.
On March 15, 2010, Brazilian magazine Veja made a list of the top 10 worst Brazilian films of all time, and Cinderela Baiana was featured in first place. The list's author, Pollyane Lima e Silva, stated: "[T]he idea of giving an axé dancer (it doesn't matter how 'good' people think she is) a biopic was plain wrong since its inception". She also referred to the movie as being "a shame".[6]
Brazilian blogger and film critic Renzo Mora included Cinderela Baiana in his 2009 book 25 Filmes que Podem Arruinar a Sua Vida! (English: 25 Films That Might Ruin Your Life!).[7] He stated it was "the worst movie of all the other 24".[8]
In December 2015, "fans" of the film started a humorous petition for it to be streamed by Netflix.[9] As of February 2016, it has proven to be unsuccessful.
Notes
- ↑ The film's opening credits misspell the title as Cinderela Bahiana.
References
- ↑ Blog do Heu: "Cinderela Baiana" (Portuguese)
- ↑ Cinderela Baiana — Filmow (Portuguese)
- ↑ "Eu era uma criança sem maldade, diz dançarina Carla Perez sobre É o Tchan!". Meio Norte (in Portuguese). 14 May 2008. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008.
- ↑ Klein, Cristian (2001-03-12). "Cinema dos anos 90 deixa legado de dúvidas" (in Portuguese). Folha de S.Paulo. Retrieved 2016-01-04.
- ↑ Cinderela Baiana (Filme Completo Nacional)
- ↑ Lima e Silva, Pollyane (2010-03-15). "Os 10 piores filmes da história do cinema brasileiro" (in Portuguese). Veja. Retrieved 2016-01-04.
- ↑ Todo Mundo Está Falando de Filmes Ruins. renzomora.wordpress.com. 4 February 2010 (Portuguese)
- ↑ Os 25 piores filmes do mundo. Brasilianas.org. 20 May 2011 (Portuguese)
- ↑ Fochetto, Caio (2015-12-27). "Brasileiros querem Cinderela Baiana no Netflix" (in Portuguese). BOXPOP. Retrieved 2016-01-10.