2000/10/11 • Released • Portuguese
Monteiro moved far away from the visual opulence defined by his earlier films with his inspired adaptation of radical Swiss writer Robert Walser’s anti-fairy tale. Carefully restricting the image track, Monteiro maintains an almost totally black screen in order to focus instead on the voices of Snow White, the Prince, the Queen and the Hunter, engaged in an extended debate about love, free will and the events leading up to the fateful attempt on the maiden’s life. Despite its visual austerity, Snow White is haunted by the arresting images with which it begins – infamous black-and-white photographs of Walser lying dead in the snow after his heart attack outside a Swiss asylum at the age of seventy-eight, a strange realization of the “death of the author” so central to postmodern literary criticism.
Director : João César Monteiro
Q
September 8, 1982
All Monsters Attack
December 20, 1969
Little Nicholas
September 30, 2009
Elevator to the Gallows
January 29, 1958
Three Colors: White
January 26, 1994
Beyond Outrage
September 3, 2012
Would I Lie to You? 2
February 7, 2001
The Executioner
August 31, 1963
Like Someone in Love
September 15, 2012
PTU
April 17, 2003
Noriko's Dinner Table
September 23, 2005
Oslo, August 31st
August 31, 2011
Sans Soleil
January 1, 1983
The Two Missionaries
December 21, 1974
The Decameron
August 25, 1971
The Traffic Policeman
November 16, 1960
Paisan
December 10, 1946
Tomie: Rebirth
March 24, 2001
The Assassin
April 1, 1961
El Topo
December 18, 1970