The documentary depicts the everyday of illiterate rural workers in Northeast Brazil, living under extreme misery. Although incapable of writing, they are aware of their condition and qualified to proposing solutions they hope for to their problems.
More movie trailers, teasers, and clips from Absolute Majority:
Maioria Absoluta (1964) dir. Leon Hirszman
Absolute Majority full hd movie trailer.
Trecho do filme "Maioria Absoluta" de Leon Hirszman
O documentário "Maioria Absoluta" do cineasta Leon Hirszman tem como temática a formação social violenta e autoritária do Brasil como causas da exclusão ...
Trecho do filme "Maioria Absoluta" de Leon Hirszman
Leon Hirszman no filme "Maioria Absoluta" colhe depoimentos de camponeses que explicam a necessidade de realizar a reforma agrária. Trecho do filme ...
Popular movie trailers from 1964
These some of the most viewed trailers for movies released in 1964:
Once upon a time there lived in the same village two men bearing the very same name. One of them chanced to possess four horses, the other had only one horse, so, by way of distinguishing them from each other, the proprietor of four horses was called "Great Claus," and he who owned but one horse was known as "Little Claus".
An outdated fireclay factory is due to close, but its long-time employees can't imagine stopping what has fed them all their lives and what they do best.
Lucky Jo and his three friends are little criminals, who try to live from small burglaries. But they never have luck - ever so often something inpredictable happens to Jo and gets one of them arrested.
Songs about eternal love, American vagabonds, cowboys and desperadoes, with the romance of railways and trains speeding into the distance are recorded as film songs, and so, for example, in the well-known standard Franck and Johnny you will see M.
Prospective hotel owner Carlos is having problems with the completion of his hotel on the Adriatic. He quickly asks his niece Vivi in Germany to cancel the bookings he has made so far.
Whips was one of the films mentioned in a half page ad in the April 7, 1966 issue of the Village Voice, advertising The Exploding Plastic Inevitable show at the Dom.