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Tributes - João Botelho
Crew:
Director: João Botelho
Screenplay: João Botelho
DOP: Dominique Le Rigoleur
Production: Paulo Branco
35mm presentation courtesy of Cinemateca Portuguesa-Museu do Cinema
Screenplay: João Botelho
DOP: Dominique Le Rigoleur
Production: Paulo Branco
35mm presentation courtesy of Cinemateca Portuguesa-Museu do Cinema
Miguel is about to turn 7 and still hasn’t met his father for he is locked away in jail. However, he hopes that his birthday will fix the situation. Miguel lives with his mother who, out of despair, decided to rent a room from their house to the stranger asthmatic Mr. Rafael. The young boy has developed a special relationship with the man who “makes an awful noise when he breathes”, as a way to compensate for the lack of his father. By the end of this initiation ritual, Miguel’s birthday wish to meet his father comes true.
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Cast:
Jessica Weiss, João Lagarto, André Costa, Madalena Rodrigues, Artur Ramos, Vítor Norte, Leonor Silveira, Paulo Matos -
Original Title:
No Dia dos Meus Anos -
Country:
Portugal, France -
Year:
1992 - 65' Subtitles: English
Crew:
Director: João Botelho
Screenplay: João Botelho
DOP: Dominique Le Rigoleur
Production: Paulo Branco
35mm presentation courtesy of Cinemateca Portuguesa-Museu do Cinema
Screenplay: João Botelho
DOP: Dominique Le Rigoleur
Production: Paulo Branco
35mm presentation courtesy of Cinemateca Portuguesa-Museu do Cinema
Director
João Botelho

João Botelho is a Portuguese director and screenwriter, born in 1949. His directorial debut in a feature-film happened with the drama Conversa Acabada, which had its world premiere at the Director’s Fortnight in Cannes, in 1982. Two films followed after that, Um Adeus Português (1985) and Tempos Difíceis – Este Tempo (1988), an adaptation of Charles Dickens’ Hard Times (1854) to a Portuguese context which won the FIPRESCI Prize in Venice. Botelho revisited the works of Almeida Garrett with Quem És Tu? (2000), which earned him the Mimmo Rotella Foundation Award in Venice, of Diderot with O Fatalista (2005), of Agustina Bessa-Luís with A Corte do Norte (2008), as well as Pessoa with Filme do Desassossego (2010). Inspired by the classic novel of the same name by Eça de Queirós, his 2014 feature Os Maias became the most watched Portuguese film in theatres that year, exceeding 100 thousand spectators. He went on to direct O Cinema, Manoel de Oliveira e Eu (2016), his love letter to Manoel de Oliveira, and two years later released the historical drama Peregrinação (2018). Throughout his 43-year-long career, Botelho’s films have been regularly screened in Cannes, Rome, Venice, Berlin, Belfort, among other festivals, where he was distinguished with several awards. His most recent film O Ano da Morte de Ricardo Reis (2020) adapts the iconic novel of the same name written by José Saramago.