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Heleno

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Brazil · 2011
Rated R · 1h 56m
Director José Henrique Fonseca
Starring Rodrigo Santoro, Alinne Moraes, Angie Cepeda, Erom Cordeiro
Genre Drama, History

Experience the story of legendary football striker Heleno de Freitas, an icon of Brazilian sports history. Beloved for his bravura on the field and magnificent goal-scoring, Heleno charmed the Rio de Janeiro society of the 1940s. But as he led the Botafogo team to the top, he himself fell into a vicious downward spiral.

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What are critics saying?

20

Time Out by

From its flash-forward framing sequence to its glossy black and white images, the film emulates "Raging Bull" in nearly every particular, while failing to capture even a sliver of that tortured-soul sports-movie's insight or visceral power.

70

Los Angeles Times by Gary Goldstein

That's not to say Heleno, with its magnetic energy, sensual re-creation of 1940s and '50s Brazil and bold storytelling lacks punch; the movie is nothing if not watchable. But, by presenting more surface than depth to De Freitas' womanizing, arrogance and volatility (an implied closeness to his unseen mother is about as far as the film digs), it largely feels like an arm's length effort.

70

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

Though powerfully acted and dazzlingly shot (by Walter Carvalho) in heavenly black and white, Heleno is a feverish opera that, like its doomed antihero, loses vitality much too soon.

50

The Playlist by Kevin Jagernauth

The movie is basically The Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Mad Man, but don't be shocked if you find yourself asking just what art he was practicing in the first place.

83

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

Rodrigo Santoro (Paulo on Lost, Xerxes in 300, and even better, Raúl Castro in Che) is mighty matinee-idol charismatic himself in the title role, alternating between swaggering lady-killer and ravaged victim of self-destruction.

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