Directed by The Motorcycle Diaries and Central Station 's Walter Salles, Brazil's entry in the Best International Feature Film race — as well as a welcome but unexpected nominee for Best Picture — I'm Still Here is a movie about horror,
Fernanda Torres gives a complex, Oscar-nominated performance as Brazilian activist Eunice Paiva, whose search for her "disappeared" congressman-husband made headlines.
In the real-life story of “I’m Still Here,” Eunice Paiva must find a new way to live after her family is separated during the Brazilian dictatorship in the 1970s. For Walter Salles, directing joy onscreen flows so naturally it’s almost documentary-like.
Fresh off Oscar nominations for best picture, best actress and international feature, “I’m Still Here” is the kind of drama we need now.
Actor Fernanda Torres' Oscar nomination for "I'm Still Here" continues a family legacy ... her mom’s reaction to her Golden Globe win during an appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live.”
The campaign for 'I'm Still Here' during awards season exceeded expectations by not only earning Oscar nominations for Best International Feature Film and Best Actress (Fernanda Torres ...
Here are some of the most insightful "America is a scam stories" people ... I'm living. Public transport is uncommon and expensive; I have to wait months just to see a specialist doctor. I lived ...
Even though Helen Marks has been alive more than eight decades, she remains in the unenviable position of still searching for something idyllic of which she had been deprived. “I’m still working on a happy childhood,
The I’m Still Here star addressed the video in a statement to Deadline. “Almost 20 years ago, I appeared in Blackface in a comedy sketch from a Brazilian TV show,” she said in her statement.
Film highlights Eunice Paiva's struggle under Brazil's military regime Torres emphasizes film's civic duty to depict authoritarianism Brazilian cinema seeks global recognition and investment SAO ...
We have got to look at ways in which we can help people ... study on Holocaust survivors, reporting about 245,000 people who had survived it were still alive. Almost half of those lived in Israel ...
“I still just don’t understand it.” No one does. Eight decades on – after countless books, films, documentaries, plays and studies – Auschwitz and the Holocaust continue to defy understandin