Difference between revisions of "Moving Image:Brazil Gets the News"
Moving Image:Brazil Gets the News
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(Created page with "{{Filmjr |title=Brazil Gets the News |embid=BrazilGe1942 |embsv=archiveorg |desc=Lauds a Sao Paulo newspaper, Agazeta, and works hard to impress that the paper is "modern"...") |
m (Admin moved page Brazil Gets the News to Brazil Gets the News) |
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Revision as of 10:28, 18 December 2021
Brazil Gets the News is a short film from 1942 released on 16mm. It is held in the Prelinger Archives collection.
Lauds a Sao Paulo newspaper, Agazeta, and works hard to impress that the paper is "modern" and "free." Comparing it to "any big paper in Boston, Detroit, or Frisco," the narrator does not mention that President Vargas' censorship of the press was still in effect (not to be lifted until 1945). This film is exemplary of the C.I.A.A..' s desire to tout President Vargas (dictator via a coup d'etat in 1937) at a time in which the U.S. wanted Brazil's full support against the Axis power. Nice Griersonian sequences at the end.
Brazil Gets the News | |
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Produced by | U.S. Office of Inter-American Affairs |
Production company | U.S. Office of Inter-American Affairs |
Distributed by | U.S. Office of Inter-American Affairs |
Release date | 1942 |
Running time | 10:01 |
Language | English |
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