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Pixote

Original title: Pixote: A Lei do Mais Fraco
  • 1980
  • TV-MA
  • 2h 8m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Pixote (1980)
TragedyCrimeDrama

The life of a boy on the streets of Sao Paulo, involved with crimes, prostitution, and drugs.The life of a boy on the streets of Sao Paulo, involved with crimes, prostitution, and drugs.The life of a boy on the streets of Sao Paulo, involved with crimes, prostitution, and drugs.

  • Director
    • Hector Babenco
  • Writers
    • Hector Babenco
    • Jorge Durán
    • José Louzeiro
  • Stars
    • Fernando Ramos da Silva
    • Jorge Julião
    • Gilberto Moura
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hector Babenco
    • Writers
      • Hector Babenco
      • Jorge Durán
      • José Louzeiro
    • Stars
      • Fernando Ramos da Silva
      • Jorge Julião
      • Gilberto Moura
    • 61User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:19
    Trailer

    Photos93

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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Fernando Ramos da Silva
    Fernando Ramos da Silva
    • Pixote
    Jorge Julião
    • Lilica
    Gilberto Moura
    • Dito
    Edilson Lino
    • Chico
    Zenildo Oliveira Santos
    • Fumaça
    Claudio Bernardo
    • Garatao
    Israel Feres David
    • Roberto Pie de Plata
    Jose Nilson Martin Dos Santos
    • Diego
    Marília Pêra
    Marília Pêra
    • Sueli
    Jardel Filho
    Jardel Filho
    • Sapatos Brancos
    Rubens de Falco
    Rubens de Falco
    • Juiz
    Elke Maravilha
    Elke Maravilha
    • Debora
    Tony Tornado
    Tony Tornado
    • Cristal
    Beatriz Segall
    Beatriz Segall
    • Widower
    João José Pompeo
    • Almir
    • (as Joáo José Pompeu)
    Rubens Rollo
    • Director
    • (as Ruben Rollo)
    Emilio Fontana
    • Dr. Delgado
    Luis Serra
    • Reporter
    • (as Luiz Serra)
    • Director
      • Hector Babenco
    • Writers
      • Hector Babenco
      • Jorge Durán
      • José Louzeiro
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews61

    7.910.2K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    10world2you

    Horror

    "Pixote: A Lei do Mais Fraco" deals with what is perhaps the greatest of all Brazilian themes: poverty. And along with poverty the other unnatural feelings and actions it brings; prostitution, violence, crime, rape and murder.

    Brazil is the country of paradoxes, and its social problems are present everywhere. The difference between the rich and the poor; the beautiful and the ugly; happiness and the most profound human decay.

    "Pixote" is one of the films that dare to touch and open these so painful wounds, and does it without the slightest glimmer of hope, in an honest portrayal of a country that, like Pixote himself, is already lost.
    7givnaw

    Unforgettable

    This is no walk in the park. I saw this when it came out, and haven't had the guts to watch it again. You will never see a more horrifyingly devastating or depressing movie. I felt like I'd been severely beaten. What kind of world are we living in when we have children who are treated worse than garbage? This is our world, what we have created, what we have allowed to happen. And I would hesitate to say that I-ME-WE are not responsible for this. Babenco made this film to wake us up, to shake us to our very core, and he succeeded. How can we be cruel, or self-indulgent, or neglectful of our children, when we see the graphic results of such behavior? He is pointing a finger of accusation at us all for doing this to the lowliest and least powerful of our society. And if you aren't doing something each day to prevent it, then you are part of the problem. I am NOT a religious fanatic, but this movie made me think about the state of my soul.
    he_hate_me-1

    Brilliant and Brutal

    Perhaps the most brutal filmic portrait of youth ever made; Charles Dickens meets Hieronymous Bosch in this tale of a group of boys struggling to survive in the reformatories and mean streets of Brazil as the cycle of prey transformed into predators is documented.

    The saddest detail is to realize that this film, made almost twenty five years ago, documents a world that in terms of its poverty and depravity, has apparently changed very little. A brutal reality captured here but with some of the most layered acting I've ever seen in the history of film by a group of amateurs picked from the streets of Sao Paulo with no previous experience. Not one or two good performances, the entire cast is quite simply remarkable, and even sadder is the fact that most of them have probably now been swallowed by the street life they portrayed.

    Not as sophisticated a vision as Bunuel's 'Los Olvidados' or as sensational as Clarke's 'Kids,' but in this genre of 'children growing up in the streets' it is easily the most emotionally powerful film of them all.
    9oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx

    Masterpiece

    Following the robbery homicide of a Brazilian judge by a street gang, the authorities make a sweep of the local street kids in the area and intern them in a young offender's institution. The film is in part a social issue film where the way the children are treated by the system is condemned and in part a story about a young lad who grows old far too soon. The social issue, although maybe broadly relevant, is hardly au courant some three decades after the film was made, however I didn't feel like this detracted much from the film due to the excellent characterisations and strong story line. It's also not limited by the generics of the prison movie as a lot of the action takes place outside the prison walls.

    The main character, an extremely small boy, Pixote (pronounced Pichote), is especially winsome and actually played by a real life delinquent who was subsequently shot by police in a shoot-out. He has developed a firmness of independent judgement and level of character that you generally only find in people well into adulthood, something that he's had to do to survive. It's painfully clear at some points though that he is just a skinny little boy that needs his mother.

    There is charisma to spare in the acting performances, including a youngster who does an extremely catchy homage to Roberto Carlos (the great Brazilian singer as opposed to football player) for the prison gig, and appears destined for stardom if he can stay alive.

    The kids are in peril because the police are beating them to death in order to find out who killed the judge, whilst the incompetent prison authorities turn a blind eye and fall into a state of apathy concerning the well-being of their wards (see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil).

    Babenco appears fascinated by prison culture and in both this film and his return to the genre with Carandiru (2003) he uses nakedness to remind us of the fundamental vulnerability of the human captives in his film. In the poster for Carandiru you can see the survivors of a prison riot lying naked in a yard, stripped of their clothes (in which they could conceal weapons), in Pixote a "hole" packed with naked children. Beaten, unclothed and helpless it's quite easy to connect with the camouflage of swagger and defiance that they need to survive is taken away. Fundamentally a human is a fragile creature that hurts and most of their persona is just a coping strategy.

    There's a dream-like feel to a lot of the film, which is often brazenly erotic (the transvestite Lilica dancing in front of a crowd whilst having her under carriage rubbed by an onlooker's raised foot), and anarchical. It's not easy to label the film as nightmarish because some of the experiences, even when negative, are extremely rich, and the friendships heartfelt.

    A classic faux pas of many non-Anglo movies is that whenever whites appear, they are cardboard cutouts, but here the old American john is as well-realised and succinctly characterised as he could be.

    Favourite scenes of mine include the post-glue-sniffing fascination of Pixote, and the half-lit dormitory riot which is truly mad.
    9bkoganbing

    Growing up way before their time

    When one thinks of the Brazilian cinema it is this film Pixote which comes to mind. Hector Babenco gives us one uncompromising and brutal look at the lives of the street boys in Brazil's largest city Sao Paulo. One only hopes that it is 35 years since Pixote was released and the hope is things have improved for these kids who have to grow up way before their time.

    The films centers on the title character played by a young actor who himself never made it out of the slums. Babenco used real street kid Fernando Ramos DaSilva as the ten year old Pixote who was killed at the age of 19 in a homicide that still raises questions. One thing this film does show is that Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence didn't make it to Brazil, especially for the young.

    We see things in Pixote that you would never see in American cinema portrayed even now. Rape in a juvenile detention center is the established norm here, especially when it involves Jorge Juliao, a young cross dressing street kid. When the slightly older Gilberto Moura uses sex to assert authority over Juliao it's both frightening and touching. Poor Juliao has one rotten opinion of his own self worth from his experience. One gets the impression that home wasn't all that much better. But these things were being shown way before America even knew there were transgender issues. Juliao even more than DaSilva is who you remember from Pixote.

    35 years later Pixote is a powerful and disturbing film.

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    Related interests

    Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams in Manchester by the Sea (2016)
    Tragedy
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film's star, Fernando Ramos da Silva, who plays a young street criminal, actually was a street criminal before he made this film. After completing it, he took up the criminal life again, and was killed in Brazil in 1987 in an alleged shootout with police. While police reports claim that da Silva was resisting arrest, there are conflicting reports from eyewitnesses, who claim da Silva was unarmed. Furthermore, a forensic examination showed that he had been shot while lying on the ground. Both his wife and mother called the shooting "a police execution." The story of Fernando Ramos da Silva is depicted in the biographical film Who Killed Pixote? (1996).
    • Alternate versions
      All UK versions were cut by 27 secs under the 1978 Protection of Children Act. The scene removed was a panning shot showing Pixote on a bed alongside a couple having sex.
    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Pixote, Ragtime, Buddy Buddy, Absence of Malice (1981)
    • Soundtracks
      Could It Be Magic

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Pixote?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 18, 1981 (Brazil)
    • Country of origin
      • Brazil
    • Languages
      • Portuguese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Asphalt-Haie
    • Filming locations
      • Avenida Paulista, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
    • Production companies
      • Embrafilme
      • HB Filmes
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 8m(128 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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