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Embrace of the Serpent

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Director
  
Ciro Guerra

Music director
  
Nascuy Linares

Country
  
Colombia Venezuela Argentina

8.4/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Adventure

Duration
  

Embrace of the Serpent movie poster

Language
  
Spanish German English Portuguese Amazonian languages

Release date
  
15 May 2015 (2015-05-15) (Cannes) 21 May 2015 (2015-05-21) (Colombia)

Based on
  
Diaries of Theodor Koch-Grunberg and Richard Evan Schultes

Writer
  
Ciro Guerra, Theodor Koch-Grunberg (based on the diary by), Richard Evan Schultes (based on the diary by), Jacques Toulemonde Vidal

Cast
  
Brionne Davis
,
Jan Bijvoet
,
Luigi Sciamanna
,
Nilbio Torres
,
Antonio Bolivar
,
Nicolás Cancino

Screenplay
  
Ciro Guerra, Jacques Toulemonde Vidal

Similar movies
  
Pacific Rim
,
More Than Honey
,
Enemy
,
Antichrist
,
Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron
,
Africa: The Serengeti

Embrace of the serpent trailer festival 2015


Embrace of the Serpent (Spanish: El abrazo de la serpiente) is a 2015 internationally co-produced adventure drama film directed by Ciro Guerra and shot in black-and-white. The film won the Art Cinema Award in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival. It won Best Picture at the 2017 Riviera International Film Festival, and it also won the Best Ibero-American Film at the 3rd Platino Awards and was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards.

Contents

Embrace of the Serpent movie scenes

Embrace of the serpent official trailer 1 2016 nilbio torres jan bijvoet movie hd


Plot

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The film tells two stories thirty years apart, both featuring Karamakate, an Amazonian shaman and last survivor of his tribe. He travels with two scientists, firstly with German Theo von Martius in 1909 and American named Evan in 1940, to look for the rare yakruna, a (fictional) sacred plant.

Theo, an ethnographer from Tübingen who has already resided in the Amazon for several years, is very sick and is travelling by canoe with his field notes and a westernised local he saved from enslavement on a rubber plantation named Manduca. Karamakate prolongs his life, blasting white powder called "the sun's semen" (possibly a hallucinogenic made from virola) up his nose, but is reluctant to become involved with a westerner and refuses his money. Theo is searching for yakruna as the only cure for his disease and the three set off in the canoe to search for it.

Many years later an American botanist, Evan (Brionne Davis), paddles up to a much older Karamakate (Antonio Bolívar) who has apparently forgotten the customs of his own people. Evan says he is hoping to complete Theo's quest and Karamakate does assist, again reluctantly, saying his knowledge is spent. Evan has a book of Theo's final trek, which his aide sent back to Europe, as he did not survive the jungle. The book includes an image of Karamakate, which he refers to as his chullachaqui, a native term for hollow spirit. Karamakate agrees to help him only when Evan describes himself as someone who has devoted himself to plants, although Evan's real purpose is actually to secure disease-free rubber trees, since the United States's supplies of rubber from South East Asia had dwindled due to the Japanese wartime advance.

Both expeditions feature an "Apocalypse Now"-style Spanish Catholic Mission by the side of an Amazon tributary, run in 1909 by a sadistic, lone Spanish priest who beats orphan boys for any "pagan" behaviour, and in 1940 by a delusional Brazilian figure who believes he is the Messiah. He only trusts the visitors when he believes they are the Biblical Magi, but Karamakate wins his respect when he heals his wife. By now the children of 1909 have grown into disturbed and violent acolytes.

In 1909, we are left with Theo, sick and having fled the Mission, arriving at a frontier post just about to be invaded by Colombian soldiers during the Amazon rubber boom, where the sacred yakruna is being abused by drunken men, and cultivated, against local traditions. Karamakate is furious and destroys it. In 1940, Karamakate does show Evan the origin of the plant in striking denuded dome shaped mountains (Cerros de Mavecure), allegedly the home of yakruna. He reveals one yakruna flower that is on the last plant – he has destroyed all the others – and prepares it for Evan. The preparation being hallucinogenic, aids Evan in undergoing a superconscious experience. While most of the film is in black-and-white, a part of this experience is shown in colour to signify its intensity. The film ends with a transformed Evan remaining enamoured by a group of butterflies.

Cast

  • Nilbio Torres as Young Karamakate
  • Antonio Bolívar as Old Karamakate
  • Jan Bijvoet as Theo
  • Brionne Davis as Evan
  • Luigi Sciamanna as Gaspar
  • Yauenkü Migue as Manduca
  • Nicolás Cancino as Anizetto
  • Locations

    Embrace of the Serpent was filmed in the Amazonía region of Colombia. Seven weeks were spent in the Department of Vaupés, and one week in the Department of Guainía, filming. Location details include:

  • Cerros de Mavicure – Three mounds that form part of the westernmost part of the Guiana Shield in northern South America.
  • Fluvial Star Inírida – A Ramsar Wetland that includes part of the Inírida River.
  • Vaupés River – Tributary of the Amazon River that forms part of the international border between Colombia and Brazil.
  • Soundtrack

    The soundtrack album of the movie was released by Plaza Major Company on 22 January 2016 and contains 9 songs composed by Nascuy Linares. The film also features The Creation by Joseph Haydn.

    Critical response

    The film has received universal acclaim from critics. Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives it a 98% approval rating, based on 118 reviews, with an average score of 8.4/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "As rich visually as it is thematically, Embrace of the Serpent offers a feast of the senses for film fans seeking a dose of bracing originality". On Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating, the film has a score of 82 out of 100 based on 31 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".

    Indiewire's Jessica Kiang awarded the film an A rating, calling it "a soulful, strange and stunning discovery". She also described the character of Karamakate as "an immaculate portrait of the unfathomable loneliness and crushing survivor's guilt that comes with being the last of one's kind". Jordan Mintzer of The Hollywood Reporter described the film as "a visually mesmerizing exploration of man, nature and the destructive powers of colonialism" and compared it to Miguel Gomes' Tabu (2012). He also praised the black-and-white cinematography and the sound design which he said "makes the jungle truly come alive". Justin Chang of Variety gave a positive review of the film. He wrote: "At once blistering and poetic, not just an ethnographic study but also a striking act of cinematic witness...". About the parallel narrative he wrote it "delivers a fairly comprehensive critique of the destruction of indigenous cultures at the hands of white invaders". Video essayist Kogonada voted for the film on Sight & Sound magazine's poll for best film of 2015, stating that "Embrace of the Serpent is a mesmerizing feat of cinema. Guerra had me at frame one."

    Accolades

    The film was screened in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival where it won the Art Cinema Award. The film won the Golden Apricot at the 2015 Yerevan International Film Festival, Armenia, for Best Feature Film; the Special Jury Award at the Odessa Film Festival, and the Spondylus Trophy at the Lima Film Festival.

    The Governor of the Guainía Department, decorated Ciro Guerra with the Order of the Inírida Flower for "exalting the respect and value of the indigenous populations, likewise giving the Department recognition for tourism and culture".

    The film was announced as Colombia's submission for the 2016 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and was selected among the final five contenders, being the first Colombian film to be nominated for the award.

    Top ten lists

    Mark Kermode from The Guardian included Embrace of the Serpent in its top ten list of best films of 2016. Embrace of the Serpent is ranked 2nd in Rotten Tomatoes' Best-Reviewed Foreign Language Movies 2016, and 23th in the Top 100 Movies of 2016 list. It also was named the 12th best film of 2016 by Esquire. Sight & Sound ranked it 21st with seven votes.

    Some other top ten lists in which Embrace of the Serpent was listed are:

  • 1st – J. R. Jones, Chicago Reader
  • 2nd – Lincoln Journal Star
  • 2nd – Randy Myers, San Jose Mercury News
  • 3rd – Little White Lies
  • 4th – Stephen Holden, The New York Times
  • 4th – The Irish Times
  • 7th – Time Out London
  • 8th – Brian Formo, Collider
  • 10th – Simon Abrams, RogerEbert.com
  • References

    Embrace of the Serpent Wikipedia
    Embrace of the Serpent IMDb Embrace of the Serpent themoviedb.org