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A Talking Picture (2003)

A Talking Picture (2003)
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This delicate and haunting fable from elder statesman of Portuguese filmmaking Manoel de Oliveira has been intepreted in many quarters as the director's response to the violence and brutality of September 11th; it also functions a poignant reflection on the birth and death of civilization. The film begins aboard a cruise ship that departs from Lisbon and is heading to Bombay, India, with many stops along the way. On board are Rosa Maria (Leonor Silveira) and daughter Maria Joana (Filipa de Almedia). As the tourists travel from county to country, Rosa Maria talks to her daughter about the myths and culture of various civilizations; stops include the Sphinx, the Acropolis, Istanbul and many other locales. Tourists board in several locations - many played by celebrities including Irene Papas, Catherine Deneuve, and Stefania Sandrelli - and they engage in lengthy, cultured, super-intellectual discussions with one another aboard the boat, mostly about the birth of civilization and the violence that must accompany it. In these discussions, each individual speaks to the others in his or her native language, sans any difficulty of understanding from the others. Then, a darker truth about the nature of the ship itself emerges, and sets the film up for an unexpectedly horrifying ending. A Talking Picture was shown in competition at the 2003 Venice Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi

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Starring:
Leonor SilveiraFilipa de Almeida, (more)
Director(s):
Manoel de Oliveira
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of A Talking Picture


This delicate and haunting fable from elder statesman of Portuguese filmmaking Manoel de Oliveira has been intepreted in many quarters as the director's response to the violence and brutality of September 11th; it also functions a poignant reflection on the birth and death of civilization. The film begins aboard a cruise ship that departs from Lisbon and is heading to Bombay, India, with many stops along the way. On board are Rosa Maria (Leonor Silveira) and daughter Maria Joana (Filipa de Almedia). As the tourists travel from county to country, Rosa Maria talks to her daughter about the myths and culture of various civilizations; stops include the Sphinx, the Acropolis, Istanbul and many other locales. Tourists board in several locations - many played by celebrities including Irene Papas, Catherine Deneuve, and Stefania Sandrelli - and they engage in lengthy, cultured, super-intellectual discussions with one another aboard the boat, mostly about the birth of civilization and the violence that must accompany it. In these discussions, each individual speaks to the others in his or her native language, sans any difficulty of understanding from the others. Then, a darker truth about the nature of the ship itself emerges, and sets the film up for an unexpectedly horrifying ending. A Talking Picture was shown in competition at the 2003 Venice Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
93 mins

Complete Cast of A Talking Picture


Director(s):
Manoel de Oliveira
Writer(s):
Manoel de Oliveira
Producer(s):
Paulo Branco
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR(Suitable for Teens)
A Talking Picture Awards:
  • 2003 - Venice International Film Festival - SIGNIS Film Award
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Member Reviews
 
Susan M.

I enjoy foreign films and thought this one looked promising, but I was wrong. The pace for most of the movie is excruciatingly slow. An emphasis on dialogue is fine, but then the dialogue should not be wooden and annoyingly unrealistic. This movie features bad acting by good actors, except maybe Irene Pappas who manages to make her character lifelike. The ending is ridiculous, and, if the subject weren't so serious, it would be farce-like.

Yes   |   No

 
Deborah B.

I'm not much of a storyteller. Here goes...My husband and I liked this movie. The woman is a history teacher that has never traveled to the places that she teaches in her classroom. So she and her young daughter take a cruise that stops at many places that she knows the history of and she tells her young daughter about them. Very interesting and their relationship is very sweet. On their last cruise they are introduced to three famous women by the captain, each from a different country,and they engage in some interesting conversations. They all speak a different language, but their mutual language is English. The ending is a surprise!

Yes   |   No

 
Mandy Carlo V.

Long, boring, waste of time. The film is interesting in travel at first but turn to dialogue that strays extremely far from the original intent or lack of story line. The finally ends when seemingly the director runs out of film rewrites the script and halts the film. No real closure, just boom, done, or fin.

Yes   |   No

 
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