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Also by Andrea Waddington: Me, You, Them |
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Brazilian director Andrucha Waddingtons The House of Sand
is both sparse and epic in scope. A mythic version of the twentieth century is portrayed
through three generations of pioneer womens travails surviving in the eerie
wastelands of the coastal desert of northern Brazil. The film opens with Vasco (Ruy
Guerra) and his small band of homesteaders arriving at the lagoons of a vast white sand
desert. He has bought his bride Aurea (Fernanda Torres in 1910-1919; Fernanda Montenegro
in 1942-1969) and her mother Dona Maria (Fernanda Montenegro) out of debt and into
familial servitude. This sets the mood for a key theme survival in the face of
relentless despair. Even as Vasco dies and his little band deserts him, the pregnant Aurea
and her mother build a house in the sand.
The establishing shots of The House of Sand consist of panning
long shots, vertical and horizontal sweeps of undulating white sands. The overwhelming
dominant is the infiniteness of white. Often the sky is white or lost in white clouds,
white land and white sky merging, indistinguishable from one another. At times the sands
look and sound like vast stretches of ocean waves. And yet they remain eerily sterile, and
conjure associations with the cold, sharp ridged outlines of the surface of the moon. The
only outsiders ever to visit this world are a crew of scientists, accompanied by military
guides, who have come to photograph an eclipse of the moon. Even though the shifting sands
eventually engulf her home and take her mothers life, Aurea will come to love living
on the moon.
The original homesteaders are driven away by a band of escaped former
slaves, who live a couple days journey away, along the shoreline, and who survive by
fishing. Their leader Massu (Seu Jorge in 1910-1919; Luiz Melodia in 1942) will become one
of the three men Aurea will know in her life, besides her insanely driven husband and the
young military guide Luis (Enrique Diaz in 1919; Stenio Garcia in 1942), who did not take
her away. Luis does return one day and takes Aureas daughter Maria (Fernanda Torres
in 1942; Fernanda Montenegro in 1969) back to civilization.
Casting Fernanda Montenegro in the role of a portion of all three
womens lives drives home the point Waddington seems to be making about the cyclical
nature and interconnectedness of human desire and human history. Aurea experiences major
world history as momentary interruptions in her otherwise isolated life: World War I
brought a solider who did not save her; World War II brought airplanes and soldiers to
whom daughter Maria prostitutes herself. And news of mans landing on the moon comes
as if from an alien planet.
The slow-moving plot, the oppressively vast and empty landscapes of The
House of Sand hearken back to the moral landscapes of John Ford and seem to fill up
with the deep passions of Greek heroines, Penelope, Medea, Antigone -- but in exile on the
moon. The young Luiz had tried to explain to Aurea Einsteins theory of relativity:
if of two twins, one flew away in a space ship and the other remained on earth, the
returning space traveler would prove to be younger than his earth-bound twin. When she
learns of man landing on the moon, Aurea asks, "And when he returned, was the man
younger?"
- Les Wright