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The director Pedro Costa made the film in a [[minimalist#Minimalism in Film|minimalist]] style.
The director Pedro Costa made the film in a [[minimalist#Minimalism in Film|minimalist]] style.
Some ominous, poetic imageries of local people and [[Mount Fogo]], the highest [[active volcano]] of Cape Verde, are used as esoteric [[metaphors]] of the heroine's isolation.
Some ominous, poetic imageries of local people and [[Mount Fogo]], the highest [[active volcano]] of Cape Verde, are used as esoteric [[metaphors]] of the heroine's isolation.
For instance, the eerily first images are of Mount Fogo's [[volcanic eruption]] and the lava flowing on its surface, preluding this film about solitary life with juxtaposition of [[silent]] volcanic eruption and locals' [[close-up]] shots accompanied by ominous music.
For instance, the eerily first images are of Mount Fogo's [[volcanic eruption]] and the lava flowing on its surface, preluding this film about solitary life with juxtaposition of [[silence|silent]] volcanic eruption and locals' [[close-up]] shots accompanied by ominous music.


==Cast==
==Cast==

Revision as of 09:25, 4 February 2011

Casa de Lava
(Down to Earth)
Directed byPedro Costa
Written byPedro Costa
Produced byPaulo Branco
StarringInês de Medeiros
Isaach De Bankolé
Édith Scob
Raul Andrade
CinematographyEmmanuel Machuel
Edited byDominique Auvray
Music byRaul Andrade, Paul Hindemit
Release date
1995
Running time
110 minutes
CountryTemplate:FilmPortugal
LanguagePortuguese
Cape Verdean Creole

Down to Earth (Portuguese: Casa de Lava) is a 1995 Portuguese drama film directed by Pedro Costa. The film is set in Cape Verde Islands, a former Portuguese colony.

The drama is characterized by its reduced narrative, and photographies of the volcano in the Cape Verde islands. The title literally means "a house of lava".

Casa de Lava was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at 1994 Cannes Film Festival.[1]

Plot

The film tells a story of Mariana, a depressed nurse working in Lisbon. She accompanies an immigrant worker in a comatose sleep on his trip to home. After she arrives in Cape Verde, she encounters the strange and enigmatic world. The devoted Portuguese nurse took a journey only to find herself lost in abstract drama. There she finds that "she brought a living man among the dead." [2]

The director Pedro Costa made the film in a minimalist style. Some ominous, poetic imageries of local people and Mount Fogo, the highest active volcano of Cape Verde, are used as esoteric metaphors of the heroine's isolation. For instance, the eerily first images are of Mount Fogo's volcanic eruption and the lava flowing on its surface, preluding this film about solitary life with juxtaposition of silent volcanic eruption and locals' close-up shots accompanied by ominous music.

Cast

References

  1. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Down to Earth". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
  2. ^ Quoted from the distributor's official synopsis: [1]

External links