Screening

About Black God, White Devil

Glauber Rocha's sophomore feature is a scorched-earth allegory about the blind followers of dead-end ideologies. Somewhere in the Brazilian hinterlands of the 1940s, ranch hand Manoel becomes an outlaw after killing his swindling boss. He pledges allegiance to Sebastião, a self-styled holy man who preaches revolt against rich landowners even as he perpetrates unspeakable acts of violent zealotry against the innocent. While the landowners hire a mercenary to take out Sebastião, Manoel and his wife Rosa join cangaceiros Corisco and Dadá, only to find themselves once more in league with evil, deluded forces. [118 min; adventure, crime, drama; Portuguese with English subtitles]

"By depicting revolutionary fiascos in a critical yet sympathetic light, Glauber Rocha calls on us to imagine what we’d want a revolution to look like, rather than having it spoon-fed to us by those claiming to represent a power beyond ourselves." — William Repass, Slant Magazine

"The fusion of European and Afro-Brazilian elements—dialogue, exquisite black-and-white images, and music by VillaLobos—is startlingly original and poetical in conveying the hope and despair of the oppressed." — Ted Shen, Chicago Reader

"Black God, White Devil is the most beautiful thing I have seen in more than a decade, filled with a savage poetry." — Luis Buñuel

Any film screened at IU Cinema may contain content that viewers find sensitive or upsetting. Visit our Audience Advisories page to learn more.

/film_images/black god 1.jpg /film_images/black god 3.jpg
/film_images/black god 2.jpg

Trailer, reviews, and more

Go to IMDb

Parking, map, and more

Plan your visit