Directed by: Kleber Mendonça Filho.
Written by: Kleber Mendonça Filho.
Starring: Irma Brown (Sofia), Sebastião Formiga (Claudio), Gustavo Jahn (João), Maeve Jinkings (Bia), Dida Maia (Ricardo), Irandhir Santos (Clodoaldo), W.J. Solha (Francisco), Lula Terra (Anco), Yuri Holanda (Dinho), Clébia Souza (Luciene).
The
past haunts the present in subtle, yet powerful, ways in Kleber Mendonca
Filho’s brilliant debut film Neighbouring Sounds. The film opens with old
photos of slaves on Brazil’s sugar plantation, before flashing forward to
present day Recife, a town on the Brazilian coast where the upper, middle and
lower class live side-by-side, yet worlds apart. If you can afford to, you lock
yourself behind gates and walls, as the residents of this small neighbourhood
are paranoid of the people around them that they do not know. This paranoia
seems unfounded, as we don’t see much crime on the streets – and what we do see
is committed by the spoiled grandson of area’s richest resident Francisco (W.J.
Solha) – who made his money on the sugar plantations. He owns much of the area,
but while his is the fanciest house in the area, with the most protection, he
is also the only one who feels safe enough to leave his house in the middle of
the night – to walk down to the beach and go swimming in the Ocean, despite
signs warning of sharks.
The
film has a large structure, layering story upon story much the same way Robert
Altman did in films like Nashville or Short Cuts. Gradually, characters begin
to emerge. Joao (Gustabo Jahn), another grandson of Francisco, who has a job
showing condo in his grandfather’s building – condos where maid quarters are
expected. He hates his job, but does it anyway. He has started seeing Sofia
(Irma Brown), who used to live in the area and wants to see her former house
before it’s torn down to make way for even more condos. There is Bia (Maeve
Jinkings), a bored housewife, who escapes through pot and an unbalanced washing
machine. She is fighting a private war with the barking dog next door, and gets
into a fight with her sister – they are both getting a new TV, and Bia’s is
bigger. There is Dinho (Yuri Holanda), the delinquent car radio thief, who as
the grandson of Francisco, has no need to steal people’s radios, except that he
wants to.
The
common thread running through the movie is Clodoaldo (Irandhir Santos), who
shows up one day and gets all the residents to agree to pay a monthly fee for
him and his men to patrol the streets at night to keep everything safe. This
basically involves them sitting under a tarp, talking to each other on their
walkie-talkies. Clodoaldo has secrets as well, as everyone in the neighbourhood
does, but is also the only character who comes into contact with everyone else
– from the upper class of Francisco and Joao, to the middle class Bia, to the
lower class maids and doormen the other forget about, unless it’s to complain
about them.
Neighbouring
Sounds is a slow burn of a movie. When the film begins, you think it may just
be a slice of life film about this neighbourhood. And yet, fairly early on, the
sense of mounting dread begins. You know from the start that something darker
is lurking beneath the surface here, you just cannot quite figure out what it
is. None of the characters are what you would call wholly good or wholly bad.
Joao seems like a nice guy – in one of the film’s best scenes, he’s the only
one who argues on behalf of a doorman the rest of the condo residents want to
fire for sleeping on the job – which would mean the longtime employee could be
gotten rid of with no severance package. In this scene it becomes clear that
resentment is not just between the different classes, but between everyone – no
one trusts their neighbours. But Joao also puts his longtime maid out to
pasture, replacing her with her dour daughter, even though she doesn’t want to
retire, and at only 60, doesn’t really need to. On the surface he seems nice –
he seems to have some guilt about his family’s wealth and wants to be seen as
just another resident of the street, but his sense of entitlement gradually
starts to show.
The
mounting dread is aided by the intricate sound design of the movie, where
everything is ramped up just a little beyond its normal volume – footsteps on
the ceiling above you can sound as ominous as anything else in this movie. And
gradually, a few bizarre things happen to make you wonder just what precisely
is going on.
Neighbouring
Sounds is a remarkable debut film for Kleber Mendonça Filho. Like many first
time directors, he picked an ambitious project – many characters, interlocking
stories, subtle shifts in tone, gradually ratcheting up the tension – but
unlike many directors he has the skill to pull it off. The movie ends with two
scenes in which we see the past coming back to haunt one character, and then
that same past seemingly about to repeat itself with another character. All
over a fence. Or a dog.
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