Orlando Senna, a high-energy, tireless and charming Brazilian filmmaker, playwright, writer and cultural activist, died June 9 from pneumonia in Rio de Janeiro. He was 86.
Senna reached everlasting fame as director with Jorge Bodanzky of 1974’s “Iracema” (“Iracema: Uma Transa Amazonica”), a hard-hitting social realist feature sometimes ranked in lists of the best Brazilian films of all time, died June 9. It is sometimes cited as a high-profile title in Brazil’s Cinema Novo, though in reality by that time the movement had pretty much run its course and the film is lightyears away from the style of, say, Glauber Rocha.
What it did share with earlier Cinema Novo movies was a sense of subversion and exposure of Brazil’s gross poverty. It follows Iracema (Edna de Cassia), 14, who leaves her home in the Amazon to become a prostitute in Belém and hitches up with Tiao, a truck driver on a trip down the newly opened Trans-Amazonian Highway, which affords a portrait of ecological devastation and a hapless Indigenous population.
Dumped by Tiao, Iracema is left to fend for herself, her degradation a metaphor – “Iracema” is an anagram for “America” – read by critics as a vision of the degradation of the region and Latin America.
“It’s a very powerful film about the Amazon. It’s actually the first time that you see the Amazon forest burning in a film that became quite well known. I believe that some of the rough style [influenced “The Secret Agent”] because one concern of mine was never to do a film set in the ’70s which would be clean and tidy and too contemporary looking—it had to look rough around the edges,” Kleber Mendona Filho has said.
Premiering at Cannes Festival’s 1976 Critics’ Week, “Iracema” was banned by Brazil’s military dictatorship, and not seen there until 1980. A 4K restoration had its U.S. premiere at the Lincoln Center in January after playing the Berlin Festival in 2025. Gullane Filmes has acquiired its international sales.
Senna is quoted as saying that his first feature, 1969’s “A Construção da Morte,” was also banned by the dictatorship and subsequently lost. His third feature, “Rough Diamond” won star Gilda Ferreira Special Jury Prize at the 1978 Gramado Festival.
He also co-wrote Hector Babenco’s feature debut “King of the Night,” a withering portrait of 1920s-set toxic masculinity. Senna made his last film in 2020, “Longe do Paraíso.”
By that time, he had won respect – and an outlet for his energy – as head over 1991-94 of Cuba’s San Antonio de los Baños International School of Film and TV School, co-founded by Gabriel García Márquez. He also served under Culture Minister Gilberto Gil as head of Brazil’s National Audiovisual Secretariat over 2003-07 and as general director of TV Brasil, president of Televisión de América Latina between 2008 and 2015, as well as programming director for CineBrasil TV and advisor to São Paulo agency Spcine.
Senna “dedicated his life to defending culture as an instrument of social transformation,” Brazil’s Ministry of Culture noted on Tuesday when annnouncing his death.
Leave a Reply