Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Ten Pound Poms
  • Culinary Uprising: The Story of Bloodroot (A)
  • Fuori
  • No Way Up
  • Queens of Joy
  • I Don't Understand You
  • Croma
  • Day Iceland Stood Still (The)
  • Reunion
  • Maydegol
  • Stray Bodies
  • Ponyboi
  • Duino
  • Sex in the Soviet Union
  • Invasión
  • Edhi & Alice
  • Familiar Places
  • Assembly
  • Mid-Century Modern
  • My Boyfriend the Fascist
  • All for One
  • Accidental Friends
  • My Boyfriend Is a Sex Worker
  • Museum of the Night
  • Nina & Emma
  • Residence (The)
  • ¡Quba!
  • Cherri
  • Lilies Not for Me
  • She's the He
  • Newborn
  • Klandestin WT
  • Compatriots (The)
  • Things Like This
  • Union Station
  • Spirit Riser
  • Groomsmen: Second Chances (The)
  • Heart Killers (The)
  • Brother Orange
  • Legacy of Cloudy Falls (The)

Até Que A Vida Nos Separe

Country: Brazil, Language: Portuguese, 110 mins

  • Director: José Zaragoza
  • Writer: Leopoldo Serran; José Zaragoza
  • Producer: Angelo Gastal; Andréa Ramalho

CGiii Comment

A group of friends in Sao Paulo see each other regularly in different venues of this huge metropolis, and act as their own de-facto family. They are similar in many ways, all upper middle class professionals between 28 and 32 years of age, and very conscious of their psyche and lives. The diversity within the group however, is also remarkable. It's made up about half men and half women. The men are the most diverse, ranging from your average guy looking for love to an Afro-Brazilian womanizing rich playboy, to a conflicted homosexual, heir to a business empire. It is the friendship (Amizade) and bond between these people that the film exposes, and at the same time it explores the different personalities of this apparently homogeneous, but actually psychologically diverse group of Sao Paulo yuppies. They stick together ''til friendship should ever separate them' (Ate A Amizade Nos Separar).


Trailer...

Cast & Characters

Murilo Benicio as Tonho;
Alexandre Borges as Joao;
Francisco Di Franco;
Roberto Duailibi as Maria's Father;
Darlene Gloria as Joao's Mother;
Betty Gofman as Lulu;
Julia Lemmertz as Maria;
Norton Nascimento as Pedro;
Rosaly Papadopol as Marly;
Antonio Petrin as Paulo's Father;
Lourival Prudencio as Ze;
Irene Ravache as Maria's Mother;
Marco Ricca as Paulo;
Luiz Serra as Joao's Stepfather;
Nicolas Trevijano as Raul