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I met my friend, André
Setaro for the first in 1967 during the shooting of the short film "Perâmbulo"
(“Wanderer”), a clever short film authored
by young filmmakers and friends, José Umberto
and José Carlos Menezes. We were a group
of young people - friends and acquaintances interested in film and music
- meeting at a restaurant next to
the Castro Alves Theater off Campo
Grande Square (in Salvador, Bahia,
Brazil). We were seated at the
tables of the restaurant "to
have lunch", I mean, to act
and perform as extras for scenes
shot for the short film. André
Setaro, at that time, was a young guy, thin, tall, pale and almost shy.
If my memory
serves me well, I met André for the second time in front of the College of Philosophy and Human Sciences
at the Federal University of
Bahia (UFBa), located in the
neighborhood of Nazareth, in Salvador. At that time, José (Zé) Umberto, Chico Sampaio, other dear friends, and I had begun to study Social Sciences (Sociology)
in the College of Philosophy. André,
a few years younger than we were, was still preparing to enter Law School.
Years later, he completed his Law degree, but he never practiced law. One
of my recurring memories of André
at that time is seeing him walking
in front of the College of
Philosophy, often accompanied by a black umbrella that
he carried in his right hand.
While we studied Social
Sciences, my friend Zé Umberto also deepened
his knowledge of the art of cinema, as I
studied cello and music
composition in the Seminário de Música (Music Seminars)
at the UFBa. At a certain point in our university journey, Zé decided to
produce and direct his first feature
film, O Anjo Negro (The Dark Angel), inviting me to compose the music for the song "I'm alone", a poem he had written, which read:
“Estou só Cada vez mais estou só Meu barco não navega no mar
Meu aeroplano na linda galáxia não
sabe voar Cada vez mais estou
só”
(I'm alone I am increasingly alone
My boat does not sail at sea
My airplane
does not fly in the beautiful galaxy and I am increasingly alone).
It
goes without saying that Zé’s invitation to work on the creation
of a sound track pleased me immensely.
For
students of Sociology, his film O Anjo Negro,
also helped us see
Brazilian society as a complex
whole of social relationships between different
social classes, different races
and ethnicities, different sexual genders, different
nationalities and different generations.
As a student of Social Sciences, I also
learned, from my undergraduate classes, how the existence of the military dictatorship
with its policy of repression, torture, and the murder of Brazilian citizens, was a threat, not only
to our middle class socio-economic-cultural position, but also to that of most of the population of Brazilian society. At that time, all the
contradictions and political, social,
economic and cultural conflicts between
social classes, races, genders,
and between old and new generations tended to face a decisive confrontation in favor of
the birth of a new society in Brazil. However, the Brazilian military dictatorship emerged
in Brazilian society to (violently, oppressively,
and criminally) suppress
the differences and contradictions
within our social history.
After graduating in Social Sciences, I
tried to get a job as a professional expert in Sociology, but I was never able to find work as a sociologist in the city of Salvador, because at that time, the
military rulers did not allow me to do it. From the standpoint of the ideology of the
dictatorship, Sociology was a useless and/or subversive
career. I had no alternative
but to start working as a journalist in
the well-known Bahian newspaper, Tribuna da Bahia, in the city of Salvador.
Years later, I left the Tribuna da Bahia and went to work
in the Amazon forest, because it was the only place where I could get a job as a professional sociologist.
It was during this point (since 1974) that André Setaro started to develop himself as a professional film columnist and critic for the Tribuna da Bahia. For 40 years, he wrote reviews of great analytical and critical quality on important movies and became one of the most important film critics of Bahia and Brazil.
It was during this point (since 1974) that André Setaro started to develop himself as a professional film columnist and critic for the Tribuna da Bahia. For 40 years, he wrote reviews of great analytical and critical quality on important movies and became one of the most important film critics of Bahia and Brazil.
I lost almost all contact with André Setaro,
Zé Umberto José
Carlos Menezes, Edgard
Navarro and other friends connected to Bahian cinema
during the years I was working as a rural sociologist
in the state of Rondônia (in the
Amazon forest), in the state of Pernambuco and Bahia, on the bank of
the São Francisco River, areas
flooded by the dam of the CHESF in Sobradinho.
That distance between these friends and I increased when I emigrated
to study (a Masters degree in Mexico and a Ph.D.
degree in the U.S.) and started working
and living abroad.
Even traveling sporadically (during holidays) to the city of Salvador to visit my
family, relatives, and friends, I
never had the opportunity to contact
André.
In 2008, I traveled to Brazil
to launch (in Salvador, Feira de Santana and Lenclos)
my book, Memorial
da Ilha e Outras Ficções (Memorial of the Island and Other
Fictions), a volume consisting of a short novel
about summer vacations on Itaparica Island (in Bahia) and some short stories about
the period of the darkest years of the military
dictatorship (“the years of lead”). It was during
this visit in 2008, that a great friend
of mine, the filmmaker Edgard Reis Navarro Filho, told me
that Rex Schindler and his group had caused
great harm to the new film, “Revoada” (The last flight
of the flocks) by the director, Zé
Umberto and informed me about the serious neglect of Bahian filmmakers: they
were unable to step up to defend the director, Zé
Humberto. But the critic, André Setaro,
was one of a few film
critics who had the courage to
face Rex Schindler’s group and write almost daily in
defense of director and author,
José Umberto Dias.