0 votes and 0 Reviews

Drama

Rocha’s second feature, Change of Life, is a masterpiece of “sculpted reality, using fictional conceits andnon-actors cast as themselves to create an ethnographic portrait of Furadouro, a remote Portuguesefishing village. The premise, about a soldier returning to a home changed in both subtle and obvious ways,serves as a pretext for Rocha to respectfully examine the specificities of Furadouro’s people, their dailyroutines and rituals, and their evolving relationships with the village’s history.

0 votes and 0 Reviews

Drama

Rocha’s second feature, Change of Life, is a masterpiece of “sculpted reality, using fictional conceits andnon-actors cast as themselves to create an ethnographic portrait of Furadouro, a remote Portuguesefishing village. The premise, about a soldier returning to a home changed in both subtle and obvious ways,serves as a pretext for Rocha to respectfully examine the specificities of Furadouro’s people, their dailyroutines and rituals, and their evolving relationships with the village’s history.

Drama

Rocha’s second feature, Change of Life, is a masterpiece of “sculpted reality, using fictional conceits andnon-actors cast as themselves to create an ethnographic portrait of Furadouro, a remote Portuguesefishing village.