Most Popular Chico Botelho Trailers
Total trailers found: 23
As Três Mortes de Solano Trailer (1976)
11 November 1976
Solano is often plagued by nightmares in which, during the Middle Ages, he is pursued by the hunter Faro, who intends to kill him.
O Evangelho Segundo Teotônio Trailer (1984)
01 January 1984
Passages from the life of former Alagoan senator Teotônio Vilela, with emphasis on the process of his formation as a public figure, from his childhood as a mill boy to the final stage, with his famous campaign for the democratic restoration of the country.
The Highway of Life Trailer (1980)
02 November 1980
The rise of real life country singers Milionário e José Rico from their humble beginnings until musical success.
Hidden City Trailer (1986)
08 June 1986
After seven years in jail, Anjo meets up with his former accomplice, now head of a criminal organization.
The Femme Fatale Meets the Ideal Man Trailer (1987)
01 January 1987
A poor woman is visited by the fairy godmother who turns her into a brilliant movie and TV star.
Rock Paulista Trailer (1988)
01 January 1988
A brief overview about the rock movement from São Paulo bands such as Titãs, Ira!, RPM and Mercenárias, presenting their performances from the festival Hollywood Rock in 1988.
Ôrí Trailer (1989)
28 September 1989
A look at the Brazilian black movement between 1977 and 1988, going by the relationship between Brazil and Africa.
Stop 88 Trailer (1978)
27 February 1978
Residents of the city of Parada 88, contaminated in 1994 due to the explosion of a chemical industry reactor, live in plastic tunnels, the only way of life that can guarantee their survival, since oxygen, which has become a good consumption, used needs to be reused so as not to generate more expenses.
Mulheres da Boca Trailer (1982)
13 September 1982
Filmmakers Cida Aidar and Inês Castilho met as part of the feminist collective that edited the newspaper Nós Mulheres between 1976 and 1979.
Hysteries Trailer (1983)
01 January 1983
Interspersed with documentation of dancer Juliana Carneiro da Cunha’s "Possession" performance, which draws from Christian mysticism, in the filmmaker’s words this experimental short is about “the psychic suffering of women in a patriarchal society”.