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- A railroad signalman is haunted by a series of strange events in this adaptation of a Charles Dickens short story. Are they truly ghostly manifestations, or the signalman's psychological response to his isolation and repetitive work?
- A woman's hair color is still an issue in this day and age. Why is it a big deal if instead of coloring, she chooses to let her hair go gray? We've heard what women have say, from younger who opt out of coloring the first gray strands that pop up, to the more experienced ladies, who flaunt vast and beautiful gray tresses. Women of different age groups, ethnicities and sociocultural strata who dare stop coloring their hair and are willing to share their non-imposing, non-judgmental, non-moralizing alternative aesthetic proposition. It's simply the look they like and enjoy showing.
- Rita de Cássia, the demure chaste damsel with a watchful father, has unshakeable faith. A devotee of Saint Anthony, she is obsessed with marriage and immersed in the mystic universe of sympathetic magic and vows. After a spell of romantic setbacks and about to give up on love, she meets an unexpected suitor who will turn her pure and tiny heart upside down.
- Virgílio Roveda is a man who devoted his life to cinema. Comedies, dramas, Westerns, horror movies, Brazilian country movies, crime thrillers, Brazilian soft-porn comedies. It's hard to find a genre Virgílio hasn't ventured into a career spanning over 50 years. He has been a cinematographer, camera operator, assistant, production manager and even executive producer. Indeed, a veritable Jack of All Trades. Inspired by the eponymous book by Mateus Trunk, the movie tells this professional's story as well as that of the São Paulo movie industry over the last half century. It also becomes a meaningful account of a generation that devoted itself to our film industry, a chronicle of characters that remain in the shadows of Brazil's cinema culture: the technicians. Anonymous professionals who who made significant contributions to the Brazilian motion-picture industry.
- Wild animals traffic is one of the most lucrative criminal activities in the world. In Brazil, institutions of the third sector try to minimize the problem but their efforts are almost in vane. Now what?