
Dir: Walter Salles , Daniela Thomas. Brazil-France. 2008. 108 mins.
Solid and involving, if hardly ground-breaking, Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas's Linha de Passe is a complex and gritty drama about a working-class family's struggles in the streets and on the football fields of soccer-crazy Sao Paolo. Reunited with his co-director on 1996's Foreign Land, Salles offers a well-knit multi-strander that vividly evokes the rigours of keeping body and soul together in Brazil's biggest city, while offering a down-to-earth alternative to the more romantic and stylistically flashy films (City of God, Lower City, Berlin winner Elite Squad) with which Brazilian cinema has been identified lately.
Very much in the mode of Salles' 1998 breakthrough Central Station, Linha de Passe offers a compelling cast [...]
formed a collaborative called Filmmakers Against Racism to
produce a series of anti-xenophobia public service announcements (PSAs)
in response to the horrific xenophobic attacks that have been raging in
Gauteng’s informal settlements for more than 10 days. 



