Almost Brothers | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lúcia Murat |
Written by | Paulo Lins Lúcia Murat |
Produced by | Ailton Franco Jr. Branca Murat |
Starring |
Caco Ciocler Flavio Bauraqui Werner Schünemann Antônio Pompêo |
Cinematography | Jacob Solitrenick |
Edited by | Mair Tavares |
Music by | Nana Vasconcelos |
Production companies | Taiga Filmes Ceneca Producciones TS Productions |
Distributed by | Imovision |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
Countries | Brazil Chile France |
Language | Portuguese |
Box office | 460,087 [1] |
Almost Brothers ( Portuguese: Quase Dois Irmãos) is a 2004 Brazilian film. It was directed by Lúcia Murat and written by Murat and Paulo Lins. [2] Switching back and forth in time between the 1970s and the 2000s, the film follows the friendship between a middle-class left-wing political activist and a criminal from Rio de Janeiro's favelas. [3]
It was produced by Brazilian studio Taiga Filmes in a co-production with Ceneca Producciones from Chile and TS Productions from France. [5] With a budget of almost R$3 million, it was shot in Rio de Janeiro on March, June, and July 2003. [6]
Almost Brothers | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lúcia Murat |
Written by | Paulo Lins Lúcia Murat |
Produced by | Ailton Franco Jr. Branca Murat |
Starring |
Caco Ciocler Flavio Bauraqui Werner Schünemann Antônio Pompêo |
Cinematography | Jacob Solitrenick |
Edited by | Mair Tavares |
Music by | Nana Vasconcelos |
Production companies | Taiga Filmes Ceneca Producciones TS Productions |
Distributed by | Imovision |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
Countries | Brazil Chile France |
Language | Portuguese |
Box office | 460,087 [1] |
Almost Brothers ( Portuguese: Quase Dois Irmãos) is a 2004 Brazilian film. It was directed by Lúcia Murat and written by Murat and Paulo Lins. [2] Switching back and forth in time between the 1970s and the 2000s, the film follows the friendship between a middle-class left-wing political activist and a criminal from Rio de Janeiro's favelas. [3]
It was produced by Brazilian studio Taiga Filmes in a co-production with Ceneca Producciones from Chile and TS Productions from France. [5] With a budget of almost R$3 million, it was shot in Rio de Janeiro on March, June, and July 2003. [6]