Silvio (2024)
A dramatic hostage crisis forces an influential man's introspection on his rise from teenage street vendor to powerful voice. For fans of intense dramas.
Genres: Thriller, Crime
Cast
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Silvio(2024)
Overview
Just 12 hours after having his daughter in the custody of a kidnapper, the influential communicator Sílvio Santos faces an even more complicated obstacle: his home is invaded and he is held hostage for seven hours. Realizing that his life is at risk, he seeks refuge in the distant thoughts of his entire trajectory, which began when he was just a 14 year old teenager working as a street vendor.
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Cast
Full Cast & CrewRodrigo Faro
Silvio Santos
João Bourbonnais
Alberto Abravanel
Ana Paula Lopez
Cintia Abravanel
Polliana Aleixo
Patrícia Abravanel
Duda Mamberti
Manuel da Nóbrega
Marjorie Gerardi
Cidinha
Johnnas Oliva
Fernando
Paulo Gorgulho
Coronel Haroldo
Adriano Bolshi
Investigador Rubens
Thamiris Mandú
Repórter Maria
Norival Rizzo
Delegado Oswaldo
Luciano Bortoluzzi
Governador
Bruna Tatar
Amiga da Patricia
Edmilson Cordeiro
Dono do bar
Acauã Sol
Policial Carlos
Adriana Londoño
Iris Abravanel
Artur Volpi
Luciano Callegari
Featured Comments/Tips
The film's lack of focus results in a sea of indecision and a lack of cohesion. The editing does not contribute to the fluidity of the narrative, cutting tense moments with biographical parts and thus dissipating the intensity of both situations. This fragmentation prevents adequate depth. In addition, the use of accelerated camera effects and abrupt scenes, similar to those in a horror movie, occurs at random moments and without tension, which makes them out of context. The performances are reasonable, but the protagonist's make-up is excessively artificial, making it difficult to be immersed in the story.
Featured User Reviews
“Silvio” is a mess from start to finish. From the first trailer, you could already tell something was off, and sure enough, it was. The production doesn’t seem to know what story it wants to tell, and Marcelo Antunez’s mediocre direction is completely disorganized. The film tries to mix an over-the-top caricature with more serious drama, but fails miserably at both. In the end, the movie can’t hold on to any of its own ideas and completely falls apart. The biggest issue lies in how they try to turn Silvio Santos into a biopic hero without really exploring who he truly was. They create an almost untouchable figure, like he never had moments of doubt, struggle, or mistakes. The approach turns Silvio into this almost mythological character who gets everything right, even in the toughest moments of his life. The film completely avoids questioning any of his tougher decisions, his failures as a businessman or presenter, opting for a shallow and romanticized portrayal, leaving out the dilemmas he probably faced. The story itself is another disaster. The movie tries to focus on Silvio’s kidnapping, but quickly loses itself in a bunch of subplots that lead nowhere. It’s filled with characters who show up and disappear for no reason, like journalists, cops, even Silvio’s family members, but none of it gets properly developed. And those flashbacks? They’re poorly done and thrown in randomly, making the whole film feel disconnected, like a collage of unrelated scenes without a solid narrative thread. Rodrigo Faro’s performance always felt more like a marketing move than an artistic choice, and that becomes painfully obvious when you watch the movie. Instead of truly portraying Silvio Santos, Faro sticks to a superficial and forced imitation that comes off as a cheap caricature. The problem only gets worse with the prosthetics: to make up for the 20-year age gap between Faro and the real Silvio at the time of the kidnapping, Faro was covered in prosthetics that, instead of helping, only make the artificiality of his performance stand out even more. The makeup doesn’t humanize the character, it just makes it seem like we’re watching someone in a fake Silvio Santos costume. On the other hand, Felipe Castro, who plays Silvio as a teenager, manages to capture some of the presenter’s mannerisms in a subtle way, which is a relief in a film filled with unconvincing performances. But Vinicius Ricci, who plays Silvio between the ages of 24 and 33, completely misses the mark. He doesn’t resemble Silvio at all and, worse, has no connection to Faro’s performance. It’s as if the transition between the two actors was made without any concern for continuity. Johnnas Oliva, cast as the kidnapper Fernando Dutra Pinto, had already portrayed the same character in the Star+ series “O Rei da TV”, which also covers Silvio’s life. If they followed this casting logic, they could’ve easily cast Mariano Mattos and José Rubens Chachá, who play Silvio at different stages in “O Rei da TV”, and honestly did a much better job than Faro does here. This lack of consistency only reinforces the feeling that the movie had no clue how to approach Silvio’s life, not even when it came to casting. “Silvio” is a total letdown. Antunez’s direction is lost, Faro’s acting is weak, and the film as a whole lacks identity. What could have been an interesting tribute to the biggest figure in Brazilian TV ends up being a boring, forgettable production. Antunez tried to ride on Silvio’s popularity but failed to capture the essence and complexity of the real man behind the legend.
Rodrigo Faro's performance as Silvio is a bit strange, there are times when he does a voice that tries to sound like Silvio's, but at other times there's no such attempt. As for the rest of the actors, they're not bad at all, that is in the flashbacks, but otherwise I didn't think the performances were very good. Some of the characters seem to be just thrown in there, they're made to generate anger and make the movie even more convoluted. As for the story, I feel it's a bit convoluted in some parts, as I said above, some characters seem to be thrown in there, such as the policeman who keeps telling the gunman to shoot the kidnapper, it seemed like an attempt at tension, but for me it didn't work, I also feel that they didn't know if they were going to make a "documentary" style story telling from the beginning of Silvio's career until the kidnapping, but they ended up taking a different approach, using a kind of trauma of the kidnapper as the basis for the whole movie. I honestly didn't like it, apart from, as I said, the flashbacks, which I didn't find too bad.
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