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Alice's House(A Casa de Alice)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Brazil · 2007
1h 32m
Director Chico Teixeira
Starring Carla Ribas, Berta Zemel, Vinicius Zinn, Ricardo Vilaça
Genre Drama

Alice, married for the last 20 years to a taxi driver, works in a beauty parlour, has three children, the eldest of whom is doing his military service, and a mother who works as a maid in her house. None of the three siblings pay much attention to their mother, and they treat their grandmother with lack of respect. Alice's life in the female working world contrasts strongly with the powerful masculine presence in her home. Although she's a good girl, the chance to betray uncovers other betrayals she didn't know existed.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

50

The Hollywood Reporter by

Too undernourished dramatically to make much of a splash. While it should earn some respectful reviews, audiences won't come away satisfied.

70

Los Angeles Times by Carina Chocano

What Teixeira has set out to do, and accomplished brilliantly, is to find drama and pathos in the mundane details, thoughtless betrayals and casual cruelties. What lingers after watching Alice's House are not the moments of conflict but the inexorable rhythms of daily life.

50

Variety by Deborah Young

If telenovelas were convincingly real, they would no doubt look like the tumultuous world of domestic strife and libido deftly limned in Alice's House. Documaker Chico Teixeira gives a light, natural feel to his small but fetching first feature.

70

Washington Post by Desson Thomson

Even though it sounds awfully depressing, there's something moving about watching people go at their lives with everything they have -- or don't have.

75

New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman

The power of this plot comes from the drudgery of daily existence, not shocking revelations or dramatic encounters. Some stories, Teixeira is wise enough to realize, are best left unadorned.

75

TV Guide Magazine by Ken Fox

The gritty location shooting, the absence of a soundtrack and the casting of non-professionals in key roles help capture an all-important sense of place with almost documentary precision.

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