Forest Warriors
Pursued by UN-recognized farmers and miners, leaders Surui, Huni Kuin and Yanomami have the same struggle: the sustainability of the Amazon and indigenous culture.
- Documentary DP
- Sound Mixer
- Creative Director
- Fixer
State of São Paulo, Brazil
1 review$50 - $200 / Day
Journalist and Videomaker. I work in the guerrilla video style. Often in good condition, but most often in adverse situations. I write scripts, direct reports, also go out with the camera in hand recording scenes and testimonials. I love to do audio capture too. I've recorded in dozens of indigenous territories, some spent months living next to them, sleeping in hammocks and having to hunt to eat. I have experience of recording in rivers of the Amazon, in small boats and small airplanes. I also spent two years in northeastern Brazil recording about the social inclusion of underprivileged children through sport. Everything related to documentaries can call me that I can handle it. Direction, recording, editing, whatever and wherever I do.
Pursued by UN-recognized farmers and miners, leaders Surui, Huni Kuin and Yanomami have the same struggle: the sustainability of the Amazon and indigenous culture.
A persecuted people. Violence of the colonizers. Heavy hand of dictatorship. Death of Rio Doce caused by mud from Samarco dam. And they insist on resisting!
Um pouco da história do grupo Seresteiros de Diadema em ao pocket show gravado no Centro de Memória de Diadema em Junho de 2016. Na plateia um público de fãs. No repertório canções eleitas por uma enquete feita na rede social.
After becoming paralyzed from the waist down, Pedro Henrique joined a group called “Hardcore Sitting” that teaches people in wheelchairs to fearlessly flip off of of half-pipes like extreme skateboarding.
Persecuted by UN-recognized farmers and miners, the Suruí, Huni Kuin and Yanomami leaders have the same struggle: the sustainability of the Amazon and indigenous culture.
The series follows the daily grief of the only Indians still living on the banks of the Rio Doce in Minas Gerais, after the biggest environmental disaster in the country. The mud of mining Samarco disrupted the Krenak way of life, culture and sacred rites - warrior people who survived land invasions, forced exiles, torture and were almost exterminated. In an unpublished narrative, the five episodes are starred by the Indians themselves, and show why the Krenak remain alive in the Still Life.
Video
Audio
Production Support
Post Production
Miscellaneous