The Last Stop (film)

The Last Stop is a 2012 Brazilian-Lebanese drama film directed by Marcio Cury. It was screened at the 45th Festival de Brasília, the 36th São Paulo International Film Festival, the 35th Cairo International Film Festival and the 16th Cine Las Americas International Film Festival in Austin, Texas.[1]

The Last Stop
Directed byMarcio Cury
Produced byElizabeth Curi
Written byDi Moretti
StarringMounir Maasri
Klarah Lobato
Elisa Lucinda
Music byPatrick De Jongh
CinematographyKrishna Schmidt
Edited byDirceu Lustosa
Production
company
Asacine Produções
Distributed byPolifilmes (Brazil)
Day Two Pictures (Lebanon)
Release date
  • 1 December 2012 (2012-12-01) (CIFF)
  • 14 September 2012 (2012-09-14) (Brazil)
Running time
114 minutes
CountryBrazil
Lebanon
LanguagePortuguese
Arabic
BudgetR$ 3,400,000

The film follows the story of a Lebanese boy that is forced to leave his homeland, involved in a war that erupted in the Middle East, and migrate with the family to Brazil.[2]

Plot

The Lebanese teenager Tarik leaves his hometown in search of a better life in Brazil. On the journey by ship, he befriended other young Arabs and Syrians, but when they reached the country, each went to a different way. After 50 years, Tarik, with the help of his daughter, resolves to find the friends of the trip.[3]

Cast

  • Mounir Maasri as Tarik
  • Elisa Lucinda as Ciça
  • Klarah Lobato as Samia
  • João Antônio as Karim
  • Edgard Navarro as Joseph
  • Narciza Leão as Mouna
  • Iberê Cavalcanti as Mohamad
  • Adriano Siri as Hassan
  • José Charbel as Hanna
  • Chico Sant'anna as Ali
  • Sérgio Fidalgo as Mustafa
  • Roula Hamadeh as Mother (Najla)
  • Claude Khalil as Postman
  • Estephan Ghassan as Father
  • Adriano Barroso as Ribeirinho Porto de Belém
  • Ghassan Estefan as Father
  • Sergio Fidalgo as Mustafa

Production

The screenwriter Di Moretti interviewed ten Lebanese families as a source of research for the film. With three of them he did more in-depth interviews, in order to learn more about the Lebanese culture.[4]

According to Moretti, there were two versions of the screenplay: one to be entirely filmed in Brazil and another with scenes to be shot in Lebanese territory. The second version was used in the film.[4]

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gollark: How do you produce ghosts?
gollark: Hmm, can we use them for renewable energy?
gollark: It looks like just a flame or something.
gollark: In what sense is that me?

References

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