pearlsontheroad an hour ago

Having grown up in Brazil in the 70s, I thought the cinematography of "The Secret Agent" absolutely nailed the aesthetics of that era.

  • forinti 43 minutes ago

    Kleber Mendonça Filho's other films are great at analysing modern Brazil.

    • padjo 30 minutes ago

      Bacurau was quite a trip. I left that one pleasingly befuddled.

    • bugglebeetle 33 minutes ago

      Bacurau is one of the best movies I’ve seen in recent memory and Pictures of Ghosts tells an amazing story about the history of Recife’s relationship to cinema.

  • builtbyzac 37 minutes ago

    [flagged]

    • JoeJonathan 35 minutes ago

      Was this written by a person or an AI agent?

      • VenturingVole 28 minutes ago

        It's a very badly made AI agent that simultaneously posted 3 comments.

anderber 2 hours ago

The Secret Agent was not an easy movie for the average movie watcher. It had an unorthodox ending, graphic violence, and it's in a different language. With that said, it's too bad it wasn't able to come out with any Oscars. I can see why OBAA won quite a few awards.

  • dinkblam 2 hours ago

    > I can see why OBAA won quite a few awards

    how can you see it? one of the worst AAA films in a decade, on every level including narrative and visual

    • kenjackson 10 minutes ago

      Well I think there are some people that disagree.

    • eszed an hour ago

      OBAA wouldn't have been my choice for best picture, either, but it had some beautiful pieces of film-making. The long shot while running through the Sensei's safe house was great, and the car chase at the end was a) gorgeous, and b) visually not quite like anything I'd ever seen before. I can see what Academy voters liked about it, in addition to the "this director has been nominated so many times without winning, so maybe he finally deserves one" angle, which I think maybe had as much to do with it as anything.

    • anderber an hour ago

      Academy members aren't always good at picking "good" movies. I'd argue they're actually pretty bad at it. Every once in a while they guess correctly. At least my 2 cents.

    • holmesworcester 29 minutes ago

      The visuals weren't terrible, I thought, but the writing, dialog, acting (except for Moura), and narrative arc were terrible.

      It's one of those movies where almost everyone looks like they just really love being on stage ("isn't cinema lovely?") and where the writers have an idea of what cliches they're trying to work with but can't land them into an actual story, even a story made out of cliches.

    • padjo 44 minutes ago

      What on earth is a AAA film?

      • kylebebak 8 minutes ago

        There's no such thing (parent likely borrowed this term from the video game industry)

      • FuriouslyAdrift 41 minutes ago

        The whole single A, triple A thing comes from league baseball. Single A was the lower leagues and AAA is the top of the heap pro ball. AAA denotes big budget tent pole productions. So big a studio could go bankrupt if it doesn't do well.

        • padjo 33 minutes ago

          Ah so the OP thinks OBAA was designed as a big budget popcorn flick? No wonder they didn't like it.

          • FuriouslyAdrift 29 minutes ago

            Paul Thomas Anderson will tell anyone who will listen that he doesn't make commercially sound films. It's kind of his thing...

            They did throw some serious money at this film, though, so I can see where people would have strange expectations.

basiliobeltran 7 minutes ago

One of the strongest movie start sequences in a while, it immediately sets the vibe.

haunter 43 minutes ago

Decent film but to me 'I'm Still Here' (Ainda Estou Aqui) was still a too fresh experience from last year to have a similar film again from Brazil set in the 70s covering the military dictatorship. I also think that I'm Still Here is a much better film.

  • forinti 35 minutes ago

    I definitely like that film, especially the acting and the music, but I think that, as with most material that covers that era (arts, history, journalism), it focuses on the middle and the upper classes.

    The poor get a footnote: what happened to Zezé? But the poor were the biggest losers of the dictatorship. It was at the precise moment that the country needed to modernise that the coup made everything stop and the favelas grew along with violence in the periphery. Maybe City of God is a better depiction of what the dictatorship meant.

calmkeepai 27 minutes ago

The immersion into the time and place was fantastic, the surreal elements being bold , outlandish, and unexpected were great. The time jump at the end was interesting. a great piece of work that some felt divided over as a general audience but overall memorable and ambitious

beepbooptheory an hour ago

One thing I noticed is that both this and another incredible film this year, Sirāt, were, at least in part, funded by a grants and state institutions.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir%C4%81t

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Secret_Agent_(2025_film)

If you haven't seen either, highly recommended. Don't watch Sirat if you're wanting a "good time," but I honestly can't think of the last time a film made me feel the way it did, especially the final minutes of it.

The Secret Agent is maybe as good though. Makes you want to say "they don't make them like this anymore.." It feels like a good long novel; every character, however minor, is rich, full of life, in some way beautiful. It's something about how the past has these pockets of clarity, bookended by loose ends and uncertainty. The mix of myth and anecdote. Pieces of life we can remember, those we can't... Five bags of popcorn.