A recent study has uncovered hidden truths about Brazil’s military dictatorship (1964–1985), revealing a vast international ...
The following comments were made by Tomas Castanheira, a Brazilian teacher and member of the Socialist Equality Group (SEG), ...
Throughout Latin America, the military and political heirs to the terror regimes of the 1960s and 1970s have once again been ...
A lengthy process resulted in the end of 21 years of civil-military dictatorship (1964–1985), with the nation’s ...
The journalist and collector Niomar Moniz Sodré Bittencourt, who established the Museum of Modern Art of Rio de Janeiro, was ...
U nfortunately, few mainstream audiences have seen 2025's Best International Feature winner at the Oscars, I'm Still Here, ...
I'm Still Here chronicles harrowing real-life events in the 1970s, focusing on civil engineer and former politician Rubens Paiva, his wife Eunice, and their five children during Brazil's military ...
SAO PAULO (AP) — Brazilian author Marcelo Rubens Paiva happily swung ... the story for its long-overdue truth-telling about the country’s 1964-1985 military dictatorship, others see it as left-wing ...
The Oscar-winning film tells the true story of a former Brazilian lawmaker who was abducted under Latin America’s longest lasting military dictatorship. Hundreds of soldiers arrive at rally ...
Towards the end of “I’m Still Here”, a Brazilian film set during the country’s military dictatorship, a photographer tells his subjects—a woman and her five children—not to smile.
When Spanish actress Penélope Cruz announced that “I’m Still Here” was the winner of best international film at the Academy Awards, Brazilians roared at home and on the streets, where Carnival ...