HUMBERTO MAURO RETROSPECTIVE
Humberto
Mauro is the first major figure of Brazilian cinema and its first
auteur. In 1963, while his fiction films had fallen into oblivion, Mauro
was the only film-maker, together with Mario Peixoto, to find favour
with Glauber Rocha who considered him as the father of cinema novo.
The Cataguases cycle
Humberto Mauro was born in 1897 in Minais Geiras. He made his first
film, Valadião o Cratera, in 1925 in the small town of Catagueses with
a 9.5mm camera. This was going to be the beginning of a local production
"cycle" which other regions of Brazil also enjoyed at the time. Over
the next four years, Mauro shot four feature films which became increasingly
acclaimed and seen. They show the influence of the great American masters
of the time (Griffith and Vidor) mixed with a lyrical vision of Mauro's
native region.
Rio and the talkies
From 1930, he went on to make films in Rio de Janeiro, including Ganga
Bruta in which a man who killed out of love finds refuge in the countryside.
The film got a poor reception because of its dissonant and expressionist
touch. For his debut in talking films, Mauro was reunited with actress
Carmen Santos who had worked with him on Sangre Mineiro in Cataguases.
He made three films with her.
Documentaries
In 1936, Humberto Mauro was appointed head of the recently created INCE
(National Institute for Educational Cinema) where he kept working until
his retirement in 1964. There he produced and/or directed 357 short
and medium-length documentaries, as well as a few fiction films including
an animation film, O Dragãozinho Mansão, in 1942.
Handing over to the next generation
He soon supported young film-makers such as Perreira dos Santos for
his first film in 1955. Tow of these film-makers, Alex Viany and David
Neves, each made a documentary on Humberto Mauro.