Amélia
Amélia
| 25 August 2000 (USA)
Amélia Trailers

Fictional story based on Sarah Bernhard's visit to Brazil in 1905. The actress, experiencing a personal and professional crisis at the time, is induced by her personal Brazilian maid, Amélia, to make a performance in Rio de Janeiro. After arriving, she is forced to stand the company of Amélia's exotic sisters.

Reviews
Ella-May O'Brien

Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.

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Quiet Muffin

This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.

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Sarita Rafferty

There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.

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Staci Frederick

Blistering performances.

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debblyst

In 1905, the "divine" Sarah Bernhardt, the world's most famous actress of all time, for whom "La Tosca" and Oscar Wilde's "Salome" were written, decided to come to Rio de Janeiro (then Brazil's capital) for a third sojourn, after the huge successes of 1886 and 1893. But fate had tragic events in store for her: it was here, at the backstage of the now extinct Theatro Lírico, that she suffered a severe fall at the end of her "Tosca". In her "jump to death in the Tiber", she found no proper protection for her 61- year-old body and broke a leg that, 10 years later, had to be amputated due to successive complications -- though the amputation didn't prevent this remarkable woman from continuing her successful career until her death in 1923, playing a variety of roles that had her now perennially sitting down or reclined.The episode above is a fact; director Ana Carolina creates fiction around it, by having Bernhardt (played with regal verve by French actress Béatrice Agénin) mingle with a Brazilian chambermaid (Marília Pêra, in a hearty cameo) and her greedy, backward, incredibly ignorant sisters (wonderful wreck-voiced old hag Myriam Muniz, comically over-sensitive Camilla Amado), transforming a footnote (pardon the pun!) in the diva's biography into an imaginative, very funny tale of clash of cultures and fatal misunderstandings.This is one of the best films of director Ana Carolina, featuring hilarious dialog, great performances, very fine art direction, a delightfully twisted sense of humor and her very peculiar view on women's battles and confrontations, though the film is a bit too long and there's insufficient budget to recreate the splendor of Rio de Janeiro's Belle Époque. The patient viewer and all those interested in the divine Sarah will have a great time.

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