Ventos de agosto (August Winds, Dir.: Gabriel Mascaro, 2014) and Viajo porque preciso, volto porque te amo (I Travel Because I Have to, I Come Back because I Love You, Dir. Karim Aïnouz and Marcelo Gomes, 2009) are two feature-length...
moreVentos de agosto (August Winds, Dir.: Gabriel Mascaro, 2014) and Viajo porque preciso, volto porque te amo (I Travel Because I Have to, I Come Back because I Love You, Dir. Karim Aïnouz and Marcelo Gomes, 2009) are two feature-length films that depict the complex imbrications of archaic and modern aspects of contemporary Northeast Brazil through a cinematographic language that blurs the limits of fiction and documentary to narrate their characters’ stories of isolation. In both films, natural spaces play a crucial role. While Mascaro’s Ventos de agosto is set in a cut-off fishing village which is slowly being washed away by the ocean tide, Aïnouz and Gomes’ Viajo porque preciso is constructed by a series of interwoven archive footage of deserted backlands [sertão], captured some ten years before the release of the film. Likewise, the narrative of both films is anchored on the character of a scientist (a meteorologist and a geologist, respectively), whose presence, either through their image (body) or sound (voice), offers a material character to the portrayal of natural spaces and landscapes. The aim of this chapter is to analyze the extent to which the inscription of the body and the “scientific” look at the spaces and landscapes in these two films – each one with its innovative narrative and aesthetic quality – reveal a renewed approach to cinematic spatiality in contemporary Brazilian cinema. Moreover, through the analysis of the narrative and aesthetic choices, it looks at the relationship between authorship, materiality and subjectivity. Finally, the use of iconic images of the desert and the sea, which are dear to Brazilian cinema tradition, is transformed by the way the spaces lose their sublime character with the inscription of the body as sensory, material and affective power in the films. I contend that Ventos de agosto and Viajo porque preciso are fine examples of a new trend in contemporary Brazilian cinema that resort to a depiction of the materiality of spaces and bodies, and thus provide an almost corporeal cinematic experience and a new poetics to this iconic spaces.