In the magic-realistic The Strange Case of Angelica, the Jewish photographer Isaac (played by Manoel de Oliveira’s grandson Ricardo Trêpa) is asked late one evening in the Douro Valley in the 1950s to take one last portrait of a young woman who died that afternoon, just after her marriage. His model then comes to life in front of the lens of the photographer. She blinks her eyes and smiles, only very briefly, but she smiles and Isaac becomes obsessed by her in a light-hearted, subtle and detailed fable about life, love and death. De Oliveira wrote this story in 1952. Last year the film, in which he experiments for the first time with digital effects, had its premiere at the Cannes Festival. De Oliveira is now 102 and he received a standing ovation. His career started in 1931 with the documentary Douro, faina fluvial. Since 1990, De Oliveira has directed 25 features; he is already working on his next film.
Film details
Productielanden
Brazil, France, Portugal, Spain
Jaar
2010
Festivaleditie
IFFR 2011
Lengte
95'
Medium/Formaat
35mm
Taal
Portuguese
Première status
None
Director
Manoel de Oliveira
Producer
François d’Artemare, Maria João Mayer, Lluís Miñarro, Renata De Almeida, Leon Cakoff
Principal cast
Leonor Silveira, Ana Maria Magalhães
Screenplay
Manoel de Oliveira
Cinematography
Sabine Lancelin
Editing
Valérie Loiseleux
Sound design
Henri Maikoff
Production company
Filmes do Tejo II, Les Films de l'Après-midi, Eddie Saeta, Sao Paulo Mostra Internacional de Cinema