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Originally published in Swedish as Comédia Infantil
in 1995.
Synopsis
From Amazon.com:
One night, Jose Antonio Maria Vaz hears gunfire from the deserted theatre
next door to his bakery. Bemused, he races to the uppermost gallery
and there beneath him on a spot-lit stage lies the wounded body of Nelio,
the fabled street urchin, renowned throughout the city for living on
his wits. Gasping, Nelio asks to be taken to the roof to breathe in
the beautiful air, fresh off the Indian Ocean. There on the theatre
roof, his life ebbing away, Nelio begins his story.
At the age of five, Nelio witnessed his village burned to the ground,
and the brutal massacre of his people by bandits. He himself escaped
by chance; a man handed Nelio a gun and ordered him to shoot another
boy, instead he turned the gun on the bandit, shot and ran. He made
his way to the coast, encountering bizarre characters en route who gave
him guidance. Upon arrival in the city Nelio joined a rough street gang,
and began a very different way of life. A dazzling departure from the
master of crime, Henning Mankell's "Chronicler of the Winds" takes us
to the African continent, a place for which the author has a great passion.
It is an expertly crafted fable.
Film Synopsis from The Portland Mercury:
A young boy escapes the horrors of Mozambique's civil war to become
leader to a group of street children. Proclaimed a healer by those around
him, he finds his new popularity can't protect him from the war.
Film Review From Rishika of IOFilms:
BASED on Swedish author Henning Mankell's novel, the story of Nelio
(the bright-eyed Sergio Titos), a street kid in Mozambique, is a fantastical
journey from the horror of civil war in the countryside to the daily
struggle for survival on the streets of the capital city. A magical
lizard woman, a disappearing dwarf and spirits of the dead all cross
Nelio's path on his journey. Surprisingly uplifting, the film is carried
by a gang of non-actor street kids as they create what enjoyment they
can out of life despite the odds against them.
Nelio is found fatally wounded on the stage of the local theater
by Jose the baker. Nelio insists on spending his remaining hours telling
his tale to this sympathetic man who would prefer to send for help.
Nelio's village is torn apart by gun-wielding night marauders and Nelio
himself is rounded up for a rebel training camp. He makes his escape
to the city where he hooks up with a group of street kids who show him
the ropes. Nelio becomes the de facto leader of the group, despite being
a mere ten years old. He also begins demonstrating unusual healing powers,
which will abandon him at a crucial moment.
Though director Nordlund makes no attempt to play down the brutal
violence of the civil war, nor the meanness of street life, Nelio's
story emphasizes how one person can touch the lives of others. Upbeat
music and comic scenarios resist the downward pull of poverty. Hierarchies
of race and privilege are dealt with obliquely: a light-skinned hand
gives a penny to Nelio as he begs in the market; the street kids outwit
light-skinned property owners and security guards. While the end may
seem a little naive in its hopefulness, the film makes its case on the
strength of the street kids' will to live, and the potential awakening
of adults from the deadening effects of the war.
Film Review From New Internationalist Magazine:
For ten-year-old Nelio in the Mozambique-based Comedia Infantil it is
a child's innocence and spirituality that offers some hope. Nelio has
seen his village burned down and witnessed atrocities to his family.
After shooting his guerrilla captor, he flees to Maputo. En route, in
mystical images reminiscent of The Night of the Hunter, he seems to
be protected by the local wildlife. In the capital he scrapes a living
among the local street children and gains a reputation as a healer.
But he is not free from his past, and his story -- told in flashbacks
-- captures the hardships and displacement caused by civil war. That
the child actors are real-life streetchildren (leading actor Sergio
Titos apparently ran away from his orphanage to audition for the part)
adds another dimension to Solveig Nordlund's film while raising issues
about exploitation.
Reviews
Links
Book Information
Swedish |
Comédia Infantil |
1995 |
N/A |
English |
Chronicler of the Winds |
2006 |
Tiina Nunnally |
German |
Der Chronist der Winde |
2002 |
|
Dutch |
?? |
1998 |
|
French |
Comédia Infantil |
2003 |
Agneta Segol, Pascale Brick-Aïda |
Italian |
?? |
|
|
Spanish |
Comédia infantil |
2002 |
|
Catalan |
Comèdia infantil |
2002 |
|
Basque |
?? |
|
|
Norwegian |
?? |
1998 |
|
Finnish |
?? |
|
|
Danish |
Et gadebarns løfte |
|
|
Icelandic |
?? |
|
|
Portuguese |
Comédia Infantil |
1998 |
|
Greek |
Η κωμωδια τησ παιδικησ
ηλικιασ |
1999 |
|
Polish |
?? |
|
|
Slovenian |
Šepetalec vetra |
2005 |
Aleš Uèakar |
Turkish |
?? |
|
|
Japanese |
?? |
|
|
Korean |
?? |
|
|
Vietnamese |
?? |
|
|
Film Information
Comédia Infantil was filmed in 1998, three years after it was published
in Sweden.
| Image |
Title |
Notes |
Vendor |
 |
Chronicler of the Winds |
Publisher: Harvill Secker
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 272
ISBN: 1860469906
Released: 2006-Apr-6
Status: Unreleased
Markets:
 |
Amazon.co.uk |
 |
Chronicler of the Winds |
Publisher: New Press
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 272
ISBN: 1595580581
Released: 2006-Apr-15
Status: Unreleased
Markets:
 |
Amazon.com
|
 |
Comédia infantil |
Publisher: TusQuets
Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
ISBN: 8483102056
Released: 2002-Dec
Status: In Print
Markets:
 |
|
 |
Comédia Infantil |
Publisher: Ordfront
Format:
Pages: 256
ISBN: 9173246107
Released: 1995
Status: Unknown
Markets:
 |
|
 |
Nelio |
Publisher: Fjord Press
Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
ISBN: 0940242729
Released: 2000-Feb-1
Status: Never printed?
Markets:
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Amazon.com
Amazon.ca
Amazon.co.uk |
| Image |
Title |
Notes |
Vendor |
 |
Comédia Infantil
 |
Publisher: Warner
Format: DVD, Region 2, PAL, Color
Aspect Ratio: 16:9 Widescreen
Language: Portuguese with English & Swedish & Subtitles
Rating:
Released: 2005-10-26
Status: Available |
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