Original Story
Writer
En una era de romances desechables y apatía emocional, una solitaria maestra brasileña conoce a un provocador maestro argentino y comienzan un juego de seducción y amor. Adaptación libre de la novela de Clarice Lispector, O livro dos prazeres es un fascinante drama erótico acerca de los riesgos de amar.
Book
En una era de romances desechables y apatía emocional, una solitaria maestra brasileña conoce a un provocador maestro argentino y comienzan un juego de seducción y amor. Adaptación libre de la novela de Clarice Lispector, O livro dos prazeres es un fascinante drama erótico acerca de los riesgos de amar.
Original Story
Writer
Writer Clarice Lispector investigates and develops the old question of what came first, the egg or the chicken.
Screenplay
Mixed with fiction and documentary, the film relives the interviews conducted by the writer Clarice Lispector published in the magazines "Manchete" and "Fatos and Fotos" in the 1970s.
Screenplay
Writer and poet Clarice Lispector investigates and develops the old question of what came first, the egg or the chicken.
Original Story
Scenes of the childhood of a girl, living in a small Brazilian town.
Original Story
The story of Cândida Raposo, an 81-year-old widow who still has a desire for pleasure, or the 'vertigo of living'.
Original Story
Xavier, a pharmacist, lives peacefully in bigamy with his two women, Carmen and Beatriz, but the harmony breaks down when they find he has another lover, Monique, a nightclub dancer.
Original Story
Original Story
Macabéa has just moved to the big city after her aunt, who raised her, died. She gets a job as a typist and moves into a boarding house with three other women. In her spare time, she listens to a radio station called Time; on Sundays, she likes to ride the metro. Then she meets Olímpico, a northeasterner like herself, who has dreams of becoming a congressman.
Herself (archive footage)
Aspects of writer Clarice Lispector's personality and soul remembered on the occasion of her death in the testimony of friends. The testimonies are interspersed with excerpts from an interview that Clarice gave in life to a television station.