Director-producer José Joffily is basking in the spotlight of fame with his latest picture Who Killed Pixote?, the big winner at the recent Rio Grande do Sul's Gramado Film Festival. It was shown in the Montreal and Quebec Film Festivals as well. In addition, the film will be making its USA premiere in Hollywood during the AFI's (American Film Institute) International Film Festival, which will run from October 1731.
A veteran of Brazilian film making, Joffily is currently screening the picture in the international film circuit before its release to the public. He has brought an insightful view of the tragic circumstances that befell the young actor Fernando Ramos da Silva, who played the lead role in Hector Babenco's film Pixote. In so doing he has brought today's headlines into the theater -- the plight of children who have become killers and victims in this current vicious trend.
Filmmaker Joffily has a lot to be proud of. Born on November 27, 1945, in João Pessoa in the state of Paraíba, he has become one of Brazil's outstanding directors. His early training was for the law with a degree from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. He never practiced law though, and followed the muses with his interest in photography and journalism. These professions enabled him to travel extensively throughout Brazil and abroad.
Joffily cut his eye teeth in film with his first short work, Praça Tiradentes (Tiradentes Square). Now launched in the media of his choice, he forged ahead in the capacities of scriptwriter, director and producer. In 1981, he set up the production company Coevos Filmes and continued his film work. His first fulllength feature film, made in 1985, Urubus e Papagaios (Buzzards and Parrots) featured Nélson Dantas and Dora Pellegrino.
In the early 90's, Brazilian cinema and all forms of culture took a beating under the Collor government. The film industry was almost annihilated. In 1992 José Joffily, despite these difficult times, made A Maldição de Sampaku ( Sampaku's Curse), another full-length film. Made on a shoestring Sampaku helped keep Brazilian cinema alive. The film, an entertaining detective story won several awards at the Gramado Festival (best supporting actor for Roberto Bontempo, plus best editing and photography). It also did well at the Brasília Festival, getting prizes for best fulllength film, according to the popular and official juries; best actress Patrícia Pillar, best supporting actor Bontempo; plus best photography and editing.
According to Joffily himself, the film cost about $900,000. Money that he got mainly through the Brazilian Ministry of culture and Sony Corporation of America. The film was shot in Rio (7 weeks) and São Paulo (1 week). Trying to simplify the location shootings, most of São Paulo's work was done at the downtown Viaduto do Chá. The main location was recreated in Jacarepaguá, Rio de Janeiro.
Joffily was unable to use the location of Diadema, which was Fernando Ramos da Silva's (Pixote) town, because it has completely changed in the past 15 years after successive administrations by the Partido dos Trabalhadores (Workers' Party).
The script of Who Killed Pixote? was based on the books Pixote, a Lei do Mais Forte (Pixote, the Law of the Fittest) by José Louzeiro and Pixote, Nunca Mais (Pixote, Never More) by Cida Venâncio Silva, Pixote's wife at the time of his death. Fernando played the part of Pixote in Hector Babenco's award winning film of the same name.
"When I talked to Babenco about making this film," said Joffily recently, "he told me, `I've done my Pixote. This one is yours.'" These are the director's sentiments too. He felt that he wanted to make a film for all of those who hadn't seen the original Pixote as well as for those who had. The Babenco film had harsh comments made about it by many respectable citizens who believed he had distorted the facts. Today, however, after the massacres of children and families at the Candelária church and Vigário Geral favela (shanty town), the film seems prophetic.
"My film is not a documentary, Fernando did exist, but to relive his story we chose the mythical version to relate it," said Joffily recently in Los Angeles. In a recent interview scriptwriter Paulo Halm commented, "When José Joffily asked me to write the script for Who Killed Pixote? I remembered that on August 25, 1987, the day Fernando was killed in Diadema, I was but a few miles away from the site in São Paulo, filming PSW -- Uma Crônica Subversiva (PSW for Paulo Stuart Wright -- A Subversive Chronicle), about the life of Paulo Wright, a leftwing militant who `disappeared' in the torture chambers of the infamous DOICODI (Department of Operations of Information - Center of Internal Defense Operations) during the military dictatorship.
"This was a meaningful coincidence, since both Fernando Ramos and Paulo Wright were victims of the same brutality, repression and violence in Brazil under the dictatorship. Fernando was a havenot, his greatest crime was daring to be an actor in a society in which art and culture belongs to the elite. In this film we wanted to show a Brazilian tragedy and the pain and rage, as experienced in Fernando's brief span of life."
Fernando Ramos da Silva was the seventh of 10 children delivered to Josefa Carvalho da Silva, from the poor northeastern state of Pernambuco. Settling in São Paulo Josefa married João Ramos da Silva and subsequently moved to Diadema, on the outskirts of Greater São Paulo. Left a widow in 1977, life was a struggle for the Silva family. In 1979, Fernando, 11 years old, tried out for the leading role in Hector Babenco's film Pixote. Picked for the part out of the 1300 boys who applied, his life changed dramatically. For the first time he had money in his pocket and he was the provider for his family. Reality and fantasy became entangled, he envisioned himself as a super star. This was not to be however.
After a brief span of success, Fernando, who was practically illiterate, could not handle the roles offered to him and the downward trend set in. In Fernando's own words, "I felt as if I'd been split into two people; Fernando da Silva who wanted an honest job and Pixote, the thief, who was beginning to take over." He met Cida, they fell in love and married. At the time he was 17, and she was 16. Their daughter Jaqueline was less than a year old when Fernando was murdered by three military policemen on August 25, 1987. They shot him eight times. All three alleged that Fernando had been involved in a burglary and that they shot him in self defense. Several other members of his family met violent deaths and so the pattern continues.
José Joffily talked to Brazzil recently while in Los Angeles to finish the final lab work on Who Killed Pixote?: "I wanted to do the film about what happened to the boy who played Pixote -- his tragic story was written in a small book by his widow Cida Venâncio, the mother of his only daughter Jaqueline. I was moved by her story, and also by the book written by José Louzeiro, the same author who inspired Hector Babenco to make the original film Pixote. I used real actors who had the range to perform the important roles in the film. They could look like young boys and then look older as needed. They were accomplished performers.
"I tried to show in Who Killed Pixote? the reality of my country Brazil. Fernando's story and his tragic end reflect the vast differences in the social scale of Brazil. There are many Pixotes today, they live between poverty and death. Many of them think that committing crimes is the only way out of their miserable lives, the only avenue open to them to reach their goals. This attitude is not only reflective of Brazil, but we can see it has been imprinted universally on the economically and socially deprived young people. I believe my film Who Killed Pixote? will shed some light on this problem."
"Although this film focuses on social issues", the director said, "I tried to make Who Killed Pixote? into an action and more popular film that would be appealing and entertaining for larger audiences. However, I did not compromise the facts of the story at all. I tried to make a film that would stand on its own feet, for those who had not seen the original Pixote, and for those who wanted to follow what happened to the boy who played Pixote in Babenco's film.
One of the key problems Fernando had as an actor was that he was illiterate. He was able to follow the directions of Babenco in the original film and acted out the story. However, when trying out for parts and performing after Pixote he couldn't handle it. He never let on that he was unable to read. He faked it. He was getting the reputation of being a difficult actor, unable to get jobs. A similar problem exists in the United States, where many graduate and are still unable to read.
Who Killed Pixote? is an important film for many reasons. Brazilian and foreign publications have recently written about the rogue police in Brazil who have made it a practice to massacre those they consider undesirable, often concentrating on children. There has been an outcry against this brutal attitude, and the government is in the process of investigating these charges and bringing police practices back to their proper agenda.
José Joffily, who for 15 years has been teaching cinema at Rio's Universidade Federal Fluminense, has plans for the future. His next project will deal with Brazilian immigrants in the United States. This story will be about a Brazilian, an Italian and a Cuban. He plans to shoot on location in Chicago in the English language. The film is called The American Tragedy, but perhaps it should be called The New American Tragedy so as not to confuse it with Theodore Dreiser's classic about a youngster torn between two girlfriends: one rich and the other poor.
Another project on the boards is a film based on a true story from a book written by Joffily's father, a historian. It tells the story of a crime of passion which involved executives in an American company operating in Brazil in 1931. This was a sensational case in its time.
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