Blu-ray Review: Glauber Rocha’s ‘Black God, White Devil’ on the Criterion Collection

Criterion’s release is something of a Cinema Novo starter kit for cinephiles.

Black God, White Devil The first installment in a loose trilogy that includes 1967’s Entranced Earth and 1969’s Antonio das Mortes, Glauber Rocha’s Black God, White Devil nonetheless stands alone as a benchmark for the difference between polemic and propaganda. If Rocha’s Italian contemporaries Sergio Corbucci and Damiano Damiani devised the Zapata western to turn the traditional western inside out—critiquing rather than valorizing imperialism—then Black God, White Devil might be called a Lampião western, after the folk hero of Brazilian social banditry who casts a long shadow over the film. More than allegorizing third-world revolutionary and decolonial struggles, Rocha stages a mythmaking intervention into Brazilian history.

As its English title suggests, Black God, White Devil is a film of two halves, each of which slots into a separate western subgenre, and could probably satisfy as a film in its own right. Taken as a whole, though, the film incites a dialectic greater than the sum of its parts. Shot in black and white and set in the sertão, Brazil’s arid inland “backcountry,” the film makes the most of the landscape, with skeletal cacti framing or even foregrounding the action in many shots. This accentuates the poverty of its protagonists in contrast to the riches of the antagonists.

The film’s first half follows a young cowherd, Manuel (Geraldo Del Rey), who flees with his wife, Rosa (Yoná Magalhães), to the mountain hideout of Monte Santo after killing a rich landowner and joins the ragtag followers of St. Sebastião (Lidio Silva), the “black god.” Modeled after Brazilian religious leader Antônio Conselheiro, Silva’s renegade preacher whips his followers into a millenarian frenzy, promising them a utopian island “that doesn’t exist” carried “inside their souls.” Manuel becomes an all but zombified holy warrior, ignoring Rosa’s entreaties to escape with her from the drought-hammered sertão. Local authorities commission bounty hunter Antonio das Mortes (Maurício do Volle) to assassinate Sebastião, but he doesn’t quite make it in time: After Sebastião orders Manuel to kill an infant in order to “cleanse” the skeptical Rosa with the “blood of the innocent,” she turns the blade on Sebastião.

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Black God, White Devil’s second half sees Manuel and Rosa, led by the bard Blind Júlio (Marrom), joining the bandit gang of Corisco (Othon Bastos). The charismatic yet volatile “white devil” seeks revenge at all cost for the murders of Lampião and the legendary bandit leader’s wife, Maria Bonita. Down to the leather hat with upturned brim and a band of coins across his brow, costuming makes Bastos into a dead ringer for the Lampião we know from photographs. In a fit of orgiastic violence, they terrorize the local landowners, and this time, Rosa participates enthusiastically, entranced by Corisco’s wife, Dadá (Sonia Dos Humildes). Meanwhile, Antonio das Mortes closes in for the climactic duel demanded by the genre.

Reminiscent of Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Gospel According to St. Matthew, the film’s first half takes at face value the promises of liberation theology and works through their implications. In one especially memorable scene, Manuel crawls up Monte Santo’s hundreds of steps on his knees, bearing a massive stone over his head, as Sebastião prods him onward with a cross. The reference here to Camus’s The Myth of Sisyphus is impossible to miss.

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The futility and absurdity of penance implied by this image, combined with Rosa’s unexpected rebellion against Sebastião, exposes the contradictions of a revolutionary movement that preaches blind, ascetic subservience to some celestial hierarchy. On the other hand, the film’s second half brings to light the hypocrisy of a revolution predicated on vengeance, renewing cycles of bloodshed until the oppressed lose all claim to bettering the world.

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Counterintuitive as it sounds, Black God, White Devil is practically a musical. Taking the place of voiceover narration, a smattering of folk songs fills in backstory and comments on the action, as if the film were composed of the images running through Blind Júlio’s head as he transforms living history into myth with his guitar. The bard’s small but crucial role in the film would seem to be a nod to the importance of oral tradition to cultures of resistance, and specifically to the Tropicália movement nascent in Brazil at the time of filming. In the transition between the film’s two halves, a song addresses the audience directly, asking us to “pay close attention now.”

Visually, Rocha’s mythmaking impulse takes the form of close-ups and pans on the body of Corisco, transforming him into a larger-than-life antihero, a fragmented colossus. This is hardly the only instance of unconventional editing. Earlier, when Antonio das Mortes massacres Sebastião’s followers, Rocha draws on the famous Odesa staircase sequence of Sergei Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin, syncing the rifle shots with rapid, disjunctive cuts from slightly different camera angles, seeming to multiply the bounty hunter into an army.

Admittedly, Black God, White Devil addresses itself to an audience already acquainted with Brazilian history and revolutionary theory, such that many viewers might be left baffled by some of the more recondite references. Knowing these references, though, isn’t indispensable to enjoying the film, which after all continues a tradition of smuggling radical ideas into popular genres. Rocha’s influence on recent class-conscious Brazilian films like Kleber Mendonça Filho and Juliano Dornelles’s satirical western Bacurau is unmistakable.

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Throughout Black God, White Devil, Rocha riffs on Eisenstein’s theory of dialectical montage, if mostly in its approach to genre and plot structure. In the end, the film exhorts the oppressed to take matters into their own hands and dispense with both gods and devils, as well as hints toward a third, more humanistic approach. By depicting revolutionary fiascos in a critical yet sympathetic light, Rocha calls on us to imagine what we’d want a revolution to look like, rather than having it spoon-fed to us by those claiming to represent a power beyond ourselves.

Image/Sound

The Criterion Collection’s transfer of a new 4K restoration is bright and sharp, boasting rich details and a strong contrast ratio. Landscapes and skies play a crucial role in the film and every cloud, rock, and speck of dirt is vividly captured here. The bulk of the extras are housed on a second Blu-ray disc to maximize the bit rate and image quality, and it really shows in what amounts to a flawless video presentation. The audio is nearly as strong, with a resounding depth to the score and the more emphatic sounds like gunfire and crisp, clear dialogue.

Extras

In his audio commentary, filmmaker and restoration producer Lino Meireles provides tons of cultural context for Black God, White Devil. In addition to helpfully deciphering the film’s more obscure symbolism and references to Brazilian history, he talks at length about the restoration process and the challenges of initially preparing the Glauber Rocha’s film for a 2002 DVD release and eventually going through the more extensive 4K restoration.

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The disc also includes two illuminating full-length documentaries. The first, from 2003, focuses on Rocha’s career and features friends and contemporaries musing on what made the director such a singular and forceful artist and person. The second, released in 2016 and simply titled Cinema Novo, was directed by Rocha’s son, Eryk Rocha, and provides an engaging and extensive overview of the Brazilian movement, touching on the works of numerous directors.

The most unique extra in this release is a 1964 short documentary titled “Memória do cangaço,” about the form of “social banditry” that emerged in northeastern Brazil. Written and directed by Paulo Gil Soares, it details not only the rise of the cangaço, but how the influence of the landscape, climate, and politics of the region played into its continued success.

Along with a trailer, the final extra on the disc is an interview with film scholar Richard Peña, who provides even more context about the Cinema Novo movement’s rise to prominence, including the ongoing conflicts between coastal and inland Brazil and the boom in Brazilian music, theater, and literature occurring at the same time. The package is rounded out with a foldout booklet, with an excellent essay by scholar Fábio Andrade, who writes about Rocha’s fusion of national themes and issues with the style of Western auteur cinema.

Overall

Boasting a cornucopia of fascinating extras spread across two discs, Criterion’s release of Black God, White Devil is something of a Cinema Novo starter kit for cinephiles.

Score: 
 Cast: Geraldo Del Rey, Yoná Magalhães, Othon Bastos, Maurício do Valle, Lidio Silva, Sonia dos Humildes, João Gama, Antônio Pinto, Milton Roda, Roque Santos  Director: Glauber Rocha  Screenwriter: Glauber Rocha  Distributor: The Criterion Collection  Running Time: 118 min  Rating: NR  Year: 1964  Release Date: July 16, 2024  Buy: Video

William Repass

William Repass’s poetry and fiction have appeared in Bennington Review, Denver Quarterly, Fiction International, Bending Genres, and elsewhere. For links to his published writing, click here.

Derek Smith

Derek Smith's writing has appeared in Tiny Mix Tapes, Apollo Guide, and Cinematic Reflections.

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