Review of Aruanda

Aruanda (1960)
7/10
Roots of an 'aesthetic of hunger'
9 November 2020
For Glauber Rocha, Noronha's short, semi-documentary film was foundation, presenting an 'aesthetic of hunger' against the 'aesthetic of digestion' (and consumption) that governed the myth-making of official Portugese cinema, which it countered with "characters who eat dirt, characters who eat roots, characters who steal in order to eat, characters who kill in order to eat, characters who flee in order to eat, characters who are dirty, ugly, skinny, living in filthy, ugly, dingy homes", and for which it was criticised of 'miserablism'. But the family shown here are not simply victims: the film shows their impulse to continue, to survive, to build; humour, intimacy, humanity. They're the survivors of a quilombo, the descendants of those who ran away from the slave regime, and though they have to survive within a semi-arid landscape, their separation from an affluent urban landscape within underdeveloped regions an index, not only of their defiant legacy, but of the continuing racialised, classed and regionalised imbalances of Brazilian society. The film presents those who have refused and have been refused 'integration' into the broader body politic: its title suggests the Afro-Brazilian religious conception of a spirit world, of embodied spirits who take the form of the 'wretched of the earth', a syncretic form with political ramifications. As such, it gestures towards the revitalising myths which Rocha will find in such communities, which serve to present hunger and misery, not in fatalistic fashion, but as a dialectical source for new myths, new ways of political and cinematic thinking.
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