This week, the DR program with Demori, from TV Brasilinterviews filmmaker Adirley Queirós. In conversation with journalist Leandro Demori, the award-winning director shares his origins as a football player and his migration to the cinematographic universe, at the age of 28, when he entered the Communication course with an emphasis on Cinema, at the University of Brasília. There, he began to develop his relationship with the seventh art. The unprecedented episode will air this Tuesday (8), at 11:30 pm.
During the program, he talks about his career and reflects on the feature film Branco Sai, Preto Fica (2014), which was nominated and awarded at important Brazilian festivals and addresses oppression in the peripheries.
“I think the most interesting feeling in cinema for me is the possibility of us being together and winning together. At least in cinema we have to win”, highlights the filmmaker.
The film portrays an incident that occurred in the 1980s, during a black music dance in Ceilândia, an administrative region of the Federal District, when a police action left two men injured and their lives permanently scarred. A third man, coming from the future, investigates what happened to prove that society and its repression mechanisms are to blame.
When asked about the possibility of a revolution in the current Brazilian institutional political scenario, Adirley highlights the need for a strong “revolutionary image”, something that he believes does not exist at the moment.
“The noise was revolution, disturbing would be the revolution. The image of the looping proletariat taking over the classic narrative of what a struggle is, what confrontation is”, he states.
The DR with Demori is also available, in full, on YouTube and on the TV Brasil Play app. The program is broadcast simultaneously in audio on MEC Radioand the interviews are available in podcast format on Spotify.
About the program
The program Dando a Real with Leandro Demori, or simply “DR with Demori”, brings personalities for a more intimate and direct chat, on the TV screen. TV Brasil. Names such as the Minister of the Federal Supreme Court, Gilmar Mendes; federal deputy Erika Hilton; singer Zélia Duncan; and the founder of the band Pink Floyd, Roger Waters.
Live and on demand
Follow the program TV Brasil via open channel, pay TV and satellite dish: find out how to tune in.
Your favorite programs are on TV Brasil Playvia the website or via an app on your smartphone. The app can be downloaded for free and is available for Android and iOS.