Oscar contender âThe Secret Agentâ capitalizes on the rise of Brazilian cinema
- - Oscar contender âThe Secret Agentâ capitalizes on the rise of Brazilian cinema
GABRIELA SĂ PESSOA December 19, 2025 at 7:11 AM
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FILE - Director Kleber Mendonca Filho poses with his award for best director for the film "The Secret Agent" as well as the best actor award received on behalf of Wagner Moura at the awards ceremony photo call at the 78th international film festival, Cannes, France, May 24, 2025. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP, File)
SAO PAULO (AP) â âThe Secret Agent,â a Brazilian feature shortlisted for the Oscars, is all about ordinary people. It follows an unassuming scientist and widowed father who becomes a target of Brazilâs military dictatorship in the 1970s â not because he is an activist or revolutionary, but because he stands up to a business owner with ties to the regime.
âHeâs in danger simply for being who he is, for holding the values he holds,â star Wagner Moura told The in a recent interview. âThatâs how authoritarianism works everywhere.â
Directed by Kleber Mendonça Filho, âThe Secret Agentâ has been hailed by critics as one of the yearâs best films and arrives amid a renewed international interest in Brazilian cinema. Expanding in U.S. theaters Friday, the film is backed by major wins at the Cannes Film Festival for both Mendonça Filho (best director) and Moura (best actor).
Earlier this month, the 2 1/2-hour thriller earned Golden Globe nominations for best drama, best non-English film and best actor in a drama.
Of identity and memory
âThe Secret Agentâ arrives at a strong moment for Brazilian cinema following the success of âIâm Still Here,â which won this yearâs Oscar for best international feature and a Golden Globe for lead actor Fernanda Torres.
In Brazil, expectations for âThe Secret Agentâ are high. Moura said the widespread enthusiasm around the film â and the public's engagement with Brazilian artists â has made him âincredibly happy.â
âNo country develops without culture, without identity,â he said. âYouâre watching a Brazilian film, seeing a part of Brazil and its history. That matters.â
Set in 1977, at the height of Brazilâs dictatorship, âThe Secret Agentâ opens with a black-and-white montage of the eraâs national symbols, from movie classics to hit soap operas.
Mendonça Filho anchors the story in a precise time and place: Carnival in Recife, the filmmaker's hometown in northeastern Brazil. As the center of his cinematic universe, the city is the set for confronting a country that still struggles to reckon with its past.
âWeâve all consumed incredible things from so many places â from Akira Kurosawa in Japan to Elvis Presley in the American South,â Mendonça Filho said. âI am Brazilian, and my film is Brazilian. If itâs good, it will be universal.â
History unfolds in real time
Living undercover and under the alias Marcelo, Armando spends his days scouring archives for clues about his motherâs past and planning to flee the country with his young son. As his quiet quest unfolds, the streets outside explode with Carnival revelry â a festival so embedded in Brazilian life that even the police chief appears rumpled from the celebrations, confetti still clinging to his hair.
Mendonça Filho blends political suspense with urban legends from the period, touching on themes that extend beyond the dictatorship itself, including corruption, state violence and institutional complicity.
One pivotal sequence unfolds inside a movie theater, a nod to the directorâs lifelong cinephilia. As fictional audiences spill out of screenings of âJawsâ and âThe Omen,â shaken by fictional threats, the country itself is living under real terror.
Over the past decade, Brazilian cinema has increasingly revisited the military dictatorship, which ruled from 1964 to 1985. Alongside âThe Secret Agentâ and âIâm Still Here,â filmmakers have returned to the period in works such as âMarighella,â directed by Moura, about the legendary guerrilla leader who took up arms against the regime.
Many of these films were made or released in the past decade, amid the rise of Brazilâs far right. Its most prominent figure was former President Jair Bolsonaro, a retired army captain who praised officers accused of torture and minimized state crimes committed during the dictatorship.
Mendonça Filho is among the filmmakers who have taken on the task of confronting national memory.
âThe military is a trauma that was never truly examined,â he said. âYou canât just say, âMove on, forget it.â A crust forms over it. The same thing happens to an entire nation.â
As âThe Secret Agentâ arrived in Brazilian theaters on Nov. 6, history was unfolding in real time.
That same month, Bolsonaro was arrested and began serving a 27-year prison sentence for attempting to overturn the 2022 election after losing to President Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva. For the first time, high-ranking military officers were also imprisoned for their role in the attempted coup.
âToday, Iâm much more optimistic about Brazil as a democracy,â Mendonça Filho said. âFor the first time, weâre holding military officers accountable â and sending to prison a president who did nothing but harm the country.â
An extraordinary ordinary woman
Few stories in âThe Secret Agentâ are as striking as that of TĂąnia Maria, 78, who plays Dona Sebastiana.
A Brazilian artisan, Maria lived an ordinary life until age 72, when she was cast as an extra in Mendonça Filhoâs 2019 film âBacurau.â Since then, she has appeared in six films that have yet to be released.
The director said he never forgot her presence â âa birdlike bearing, a voice shaped by 60 years of cigarettes and a razor-sharp sense of humor.â He later wrote the role of Dona Sebastiana specifically for her.
The character, who shelters political fugitives including Armando, stands out. When she walks toward the camera in a flowered dress, cigarette in hand, the film briefly belongs to her.
âHer authenticity carries something of many women Iâve known,â Mendonça Filho said. âThereâs something literary about her.â
Moura said he wasn't able to hide his awe at the actorâs authenticity. He pointed to their first scene together, in which Dona Sebastiana shows Armando the apartment he is moving into.
If viewers watch closely, he said, they will see that he is genuinely âlike a fool orbiting around her.â
Maria lives in a rural village of about 22,000 people in northeastern Rio Grande do Norte. There is no movie theater there. She says the only films she has ever seen are the ones she acted in.
For Maria, the authenticity of her performance begins with Mendonça Filhoâs script.
âFilming is wonderful, and Kleber Mendonçaâs films feel like theyâre copying our lives,â she said, laughing. âDona Sebastianaâs life is my life. Iâve always liked taking people in, and Iâve always liked complaining.â
Since the filmâs release in Brazil, the seamstress-turned-actor has become a national sensation, appearing on morning shows and gaining thousands of followers.
She is also hoping for Oscar recognition â for the film and, perhaps, for herself.
âI want to go to the Oscars,â she said. âAnd I want to make my own dress. It will be red, very sparkly.â
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Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ