Barbosa
Barbosa
| 23 June 1988 (USA)
Barbosa Trailers

Thirty-eight years after the 1950 World Cup, a man went back in time to prevent the goal that defeated Brazil, destroyed his childhood dreams and ended goalkeeper Barbosa's career.

Reviews
Acensbart

Excellent but underrated film

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Rio Hayward

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

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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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Cassandra

Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.

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Rodrigo Amaro

I think all sports fanatics out there had already imagined this movie's scenario of turning back time just to make his team or favorite sportist win an important match or competition they lost. In this particular case, a frustrated man (Antônio Fagundes) who testified as a child Brazil's loss at the 1950's World Cup played at home on match against Uruguay, his torment is not just about losing the cup but it's more important to save the reputation of the man blamed for "our failure" to win the Cup, the poor goalie Barbosa, who was caught off-guard by a powerful kick in the corner by the Uruguayan hero, leaving the match 2-1. Our hero builds a machine and will do everything possible to avoid such tragic fate that saddened a whole nation and unjustly branded Barbosa's career. The film directed by Jorge Furtado and Ana Luiza Azevedo is hugely creative, intense and captures the essence of what being a sports fan really is in a nation that treats soccer as a national passion to sickening extremes - just like pointing fingers at Barbosa as the guy who made a whole nation cry. If possible we would turn back the time, impeach that goal or warn the goalie about the ball. As evidenced, the main character firmly believes that everything that went wrong with him and in the country was because of that awful match. Maybe that's true...The match is genuinely recreated intercut with real images and the actual audio of the game, while Fagundes character and his assistant figure ways of contacting Barbosa during the game, at the same time the main character feels nostalgic about the things he seen and felt at the time (he sees himself as a child watching the match).And the real Barbosa talks about that terrible day that marked his life, in brief interviews presented in between scenes. Obviously he felt a lot with the fact of not being able to block the goal, you can see it in his eyes but he was quite warmful while presenting his side of the story, far from his bittered reaction (with reason, though) in 1994, during another World's Cup when he was invited to be part of a sportscaster team to make comments along with former soccer players but the TV directors changed their minds claiming his presence would bring bad luck to the team. After that, he vanished from the news until his death a few years ago. And in those moments, we really wished to do more for this man who didn't deserved none of this. The movie kept real: some things never change; otherwise, it just gets worse. 10/10

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alex_palombo

This movie gives you an idea about the drama that all brazilians passed on 1950 world Cup, and especially the drama of Barbosa - the brazilian keeper on that cup. The defeat against Uruguay is in the mind of all brazilians until today.

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