I'm Still Here Poster

I'm Still Here (2024)

PG-13 09/19/2024 Drama, History 2h 18m
80%
User
Score
8.6/10
85/100

When a mother's courage defies tyranny, hope is reborn.

Overview

A woman married to a former politician during the 1971 military dictatorship in Brazil is forced to reinvent herself and chart a new course for her family after a violent and arbitrary act.

Murilo Hauser

Screenplay

Walter Salles

Director

Heitor Lorega

Screenplay

Top Billed Cast

Fernanda Torres

Fernanda Torres

Eunice Paiva

Selton Mello

Selton Mello

Rubens Paiva

Valentina Herszage

Valentina Herszage

Veroca

Maria Manoella

Maria Manoella

Veroca

Luiza Kosovski

Luiza Kosovski

Eliana

Marjorie Estiano

Marjorie Estiano

Eliana

Bárbara Luz

Bárbara Luz

Nalu

Gabriela Carneiro da Cunha

Gabriela Carneiro da Cunha

Nalu

Cora Ramalho

Cora Ramalho

Babiu

Media

9 Minute Preview [Subtitled]

9 Minute Preview [Subtitled]

Walter Salles and Fernanda Torres Q&A, Hosted by Alexander Payne

Walter Salles and Fernanda Torres Q&A, Hosted by Alexander Payne

'I'm Still Here' Best International Feature Film Press Room Speech | 97th Oscars (2025)

'I'm Still Here' Best International Feature Film Press Room Speech | 97th Oscars (2025)

He's Gone [Subtitled]

He's Gone [Subtitled]

"Where Is My Husband" Official Clip [Subtitled]

"Where Is My Husband" Official Clip [Subtitled]

The On-Set Memoir of I'M STILL HERE with Fernanda Torres and Selton Mello

The On-Set Memoir of I'M STILL HERE with Fernanda Torres and Selton Mello

Walter Salles on I'm Still Here | FLC Luminaries

Walter Salles on I'm Still Here | FLC Luminaries

Fernanda Torres and Selton Mello on the 'Ripped From the Headlines' Story of I'M STILL HERE

Fernanda Torres and Selton Mello on the 'Ripped From the Headlines' Story of I'M STILL HERE

Official UK Teaser Trailer [Subtitled]

Official UK Teaser Trailer [Subtitled]

When the Brazilian Government Kidnaped Its Own People - I’m Still Here Q&A

When the Brazilian Government Kidnaped Its Own People - I’m Still Here Q&A

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Reviews

A review by Brent Marchant

Written on January 26, 2025

Films featuring dark political themes are an acquired taste for many moviegoers, but, when they tell personal stories within such a context, they generally become more accessible for audience members, even those who might not ordinarily gravitate to pictures in this genre. That’s a goal expertly accomplished in the latest from director Walter Salles. This superb fact-based offering tells the heart-wrenching story of former Brazilian politician Rubens Paiva (Selton Mello) who, in 1971, was seized by, and subsequently disappeared at the hands of, the military dictatorship that overran in the country at that time. Paiva, who was working as an engineer when captured, was taken because of his liberal-leaning politics, especially in his clandestine efforts to assist those opposed to the oppres...

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A review by CinemaSerf

Written on January 30, 2025

The Paiva family leads an ordinary life until one night when a knock on their door changes things for ever. Rubens (Selton Mello) was formerly a Labour Party congressman in Brazil but now that the military have taken over, he is suspected of ties with the outlawed Communists. He is taken away and shortly after his wife Eunice (Fernanda Torres) and their elder daughter is also taken in for interrogation. For the next twenty minutes or so as she spends an intangible time in jail, we are exposed to some of the most effective cinematic menace I've ever felt. There is no graphic violence nor very little angry dialogue. Indeed, there isn't a great deal of actual physical threat at all. Her imprisonment and her deprivation of information is the stick they beat her with and it's profoundly traumat...

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A review by r96sk

Written on February 27, 2025

<em>'I’m Still Here'</em> undoubtedly merits praise, it's an astutely made picture regarding a dark time in Brazilian history. The film's biggest plus, for me, is how warmly they portray the Paivas, it genuinely feels as if you are watching a real family; the actors play a big part in that, of course.

Fernanda Torres is the standout, rightly so given she leads much of what we see. An excellent performance! Selton Mello sticks out too, as do all of the relatively younger cast members; e.g. Luiza Kosovski and Valentina Herszage. There isn't anyone onscreen who puts a foot wrong.

I will say that I don't think this needed to be a 138 minute movie, there are a couple of moments where I felt like it was going to conclude and it didn't. This isn't a major detail though, because it is a fi...

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