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Gods grace
comes through
in Brazilian movie
In
its own allegorical way, the film looks forward to the
day when we will all see Jesus face-to-face.

Central Station, starring Fernanda Montenegro,
Vinicius de Oliveira and Othon Bastos, is directed by
Walter Salles. Rated R for brief, sudden violence and
mild profanity.
By
Peter T. Chattaway
ChristianWeek film critic
Brazil has some of the most heavily
populated cities in the world. It is also currently home
to one of the largest religious revivals in the world. Central
Station, the new film from Brazilian director Walter
Salles, tells a familiar storyan old, cynical woman
finds herself looking after a young boy and, in the
process, she learns how to open her heart but it
makes use of its setting in an original and thoughtful
way.
Dora (Fernanda Montenegro) is a retired
schoolteacher who makes her living writing and mailing
letters for the illiterate customers who pass her way in
a crowded train station in Rio de Janeiro. Sometimes a
face stands out from the crowd; in fact, we see these
customers dictating their missives before we see Dora
herself. One man, smiling enigmatically, thanks someone
for cheating him and robbing him of everything he owned;
his message of grace and acceptance is a harbinger of
things to come.
Dora, however, is not particularly
moved by the insights she gets into the hearts and lives
of her clients. In fact, she takes the letters home to
her apartment and reads them to a friend; after
theyve had a laugh or two, she sends the ones that,
in her opinion, deserve to be sent, and she tears up or
files away, indefinitely, the ones that fail to impress
her.
One day she takes dictation from a
woman whose son JosuŽ (Vinicius de Oliveira) wishes to
meet his father, a man named Jesus (who already has two
adult sons named after Moses and Isaiah). However, the
woman is killed in a traffic accident on the way out of
the station, and JosuŽ is left behind to fend for
himself. Dora reluctantly takes him under her wing and,
together, they take a journey out of the city in search
of his father.
The story from here is relatively
predictable, so its up to the actors to keep things
personal and interesting. Montenegro, as Dora, definitely
achieves this; her expressive features convey at times a
resigned world-weariness, and at other timeslater
in the filmthe beginnings of a more radiant joy,
and its a pleasure just to watch her come alive.
De Oliveira is less successful, and
Im not sure whether its due more to the
character, who is kept somewhat at a distance by his
precocious sense of juvenile machismo, or to the
performance, which lacks the heart-breaking emotional
force of, say, the child in Kolya.
The film also makes distinctive, and
prominent, use of religious themes and characters. Dora
and JosuŽ are helped at one point by an evangelical
truck driver, whose generosity is ultimately compromised
by his all-too-human fear of moral failure. Later, Dora
reaches a crucial turning point in the midst of a
Catholic revival ceremony, where worshippers loudly call
on God to pierce the darkness of their souls with his
Light.
There is no explicit conversion scene
here. Dora herself does not directly call out to God, as
such, but she is overwhelmed by the prayers of those
surrounding her; it is almost as if she benefits from
Gods grace by osmosis. And, in the end, she becomes
an agent of that grace herself.
The film, in its own allegorical way,
looks forward to the day when we will all see Jesus
face-to-face, and it paints a touching and poetic
portrait of the faith, hope and love that can come to us
while we wait.
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