Mostrando postagens com marcador João Nabuco. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador João Nabuco. Mostrar todas as postagens

12 janeiro 2007

João Nabuco - Os Carvoeiros (1999)

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João NabucoEm 1990, formou-se em música para cinema e televisão na Berklee College of Music de Boston (Massachussets, EUA).

De 1991 a 1993, trabalhou como produtor musical na Rede Globo, criando e executando trilhas sonoras para novelas e minisséries, além de vinhetas para jornalismo, destacando-se a da edição extraordinária do "Jornal Nacional", veiculada até os dias atuais.

Em 1994, seu samba "Cheiro milagroso" foi escolhido para o desfile do bloco "Suvaco do Cristo".

Em 1996, compôs e assinou a direção musical de "Pequeno dicionário amoroso", filme de Sandra Werneck, que contou com a participação especial de Ed Motta e Nana Caymmi.

Em 1999, escreveu a trilha sonora do filme "Os carvoeiros", contemplado com vários prêmios nacionais e internacionais.

Em 2000, participou, ao lado de Ana Carolina, Seu Jorge e Ronaldo Bastos, da trilha sonora de "Amores possíveis", filme de Sandra Werneck.

Em 2002, participou com duas composições próprias do CD "4° comPasso" (Biscoito Fino).


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Scene from the movie The Charcoal PeopleNigel Noble's documentary about the lives of the carvoeiros, the migrant workers who produce charcoal from the trees of the Brazilian rain forests, is based on an award-winning photographic essay, and that is how it is best appreciated.

An evocative, moving visual portrait that vividly illustrates the conditions under which these people must work, "The Charcoal People" is nonetheless repetitive and ultimately rather dull as it proceeds through its relatively brief 70 minutes.

Receiving its world theatrical premiere at New York's Screening Room, the film will find its true calling as a specialty item for educational situations.

Scene from the movie The Charcoal PeopleThe trees harvested from the forests are used in the production of charcoal for the steel industries around the world to manufacture cars, buildings, etc. While the ecological consequences of this are touched upon in the film, it is generally far more interested in depicting the exact nature of the process and exploring the lives of the workers who must endure highly difficult conditions for very modest wages. The people on display here range from a 76-year-old man who exhibits an impressive physical vigor -- his parents, he informs us, lived well into their hundreds -- to a 9-year-old child who, it's quite clear, has few options for his future.

As they perform their often hazardous jobs, which involves cutting down trees and burning them in large kilns, the workers recount the dangerous, difficult conditions that they must endure. Although several of the subjects are quite articulate (and some are quite prideful about their work), the film's real impact is visual; the superb cinematography all too vividly captures the beauty and harshness inherent in this assault on nature.

Frank Scheck - May 4, 2001 - extracted from The Hollywood Reporter

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The composer, arranger and producer, João Nabuco, has already participated in various sound tracks, as those of the films Amores Possíveis and Pequeno Dicionário Amoroso. João is also musical director of the Sundance Festival.

Extracted from Biscoito Fino
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