Men and Women (1964) Poster

(1964)

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8/10
Mesmerizing Odete Lara in Khouri's best film
debblyst13 January 2004
Unanimously considered the best film of Brazilian "existentialist" director/writer Walter Hugo Khouri's four-decade career -- here massively influenced by Antonioni's "alienation" trilogy -- "Noite Vazia" (Empty Night) was an incredibly bold portrayal of bourgeois cynicism, unglamorous sex and unsettling urban oppression, focused on a great quartet of characters and their soul-searching struggle in the big city of São Paulo (5 million people in 1964).

Luis (Mario Benvenuti), an alpha-macho, well-off, married playboy in his late 30s,concentrates all his energies on his nightly female-hunting adventures, but is now in a cul-de-sac: he's terminally bored, his marriage is a formality, his relationship with his young son is superficial, his sex escapades have become repetitive and unexciting (there are hints of first signs of impotence). He teams with his younger, repressed and anguished buddy Nelson (Italian actor Gabriele Tinti, then married to Brazilian actress Norma Bengell), who intimately despises Luís's way of life, but nevertheless profits from it (Luís pays for Nelson's women and booze). One particularly tedious night they meet high-class prostitutes Regina (blonde lioness Odete Lara) and Mara (huge-eyed brunette Norma Bengell). The quartet goes to Luis's garçonnière, where they have sex, change partners, drink, get bored, argue and fight; by dawn their "masks" show cracks all over (pay attention to the highly symbolic opening credits' design).

"Noite Vazia" features dazzling rhythmic, dissonant music by Tropicalist composer Rogério Duprat and vintage Brazilian bossa nova band Zimbo Trio, absolutely decisive in creating the angsty, desperate, late night mood, as is the chiaroscuro b&w photography by Hungarian D.P. Rudolf Icsey (undoubtedly influenced by Malle's night sequences in "Ascenseur pour l'échafaud" and Antonioni's trilogy). The crude, acid dialog provides ideal material for the performers: Benvenuti's tired, end-of-the-rope old lion Luís; Bengell's dreamy, lonely, haunted Mara who wonders if she'll ever know love; Tinti's insecure, tormented Nelson, drowning in crushed sensitivity, social inferiority, existential void and muted anger.

And, above all, it features one of the best female prostitute roles ever put on film: the world-weary, no-nonsense, aggressive, emotionally damaged Regina (Odete Lara), who knows what makes the world go round (money, power and sex, of course) and is perfectly aware of her beauty and allure, but also of her social standing (being poor and socially despised among the rich) -- a woman whose dreams of love and happiness were dropped along the way a long time ago, and now is haunted by aging and by violent, bloody nightmares she can't understand, and whose future is a scary downhill slope. It's a realistic prostitute portrayal of huge impact: her man-hating and her bourgeois-hating are not only an expression of cynicism and anger, they're an antidote against humiliation and manipulation; they make perfect sense (she's the toughest and wisest of them all). There's a long list of celebrated 1960s movies about "angry" men becoming conscientious revolutionaries, very few about "angry" women -- "Noite Vazia" is about a prostitute with very lucid class, gender and political conscience.

Odete Lara, then 35 years old, gives sex allure a new meaning: raw, crude and provocative, with her amazing curvaceous body, beautiful blond feline features, cold piercing eyes, tough mouth, spot-on debauched delivery and total understanding of her character -- someone who knows the cruel ways of the world (Lara is the real-life daughter of suicidal parents). The scene in bed where she gazes at her own body in the mirrored ceiling is awesome: the pride in her physical beauty, her world-awareness, her toughness are survival weapons that keep her from being a passive, doll-like, disposable sex toy men want her to be. Her final close-up in the elevator is unforgettable: under a ton of make-up there's nothing left inside, she's an hollow carcass. This is one of her very best roles, alongside her parts in Nelson Pereira dos Santos' "Boca de Ouro" (1962) and Antonio Carlos da Fontoura's "Copacabana Me Engana" (1968). A must-see for all of her many Brazilian fans.

"Noite Vazia" remains one of the top Brazilian movies of the 1960s. It has mood to spare and, though it's now tamer and everybody in it is bored to death, it's anything but naive or boring. If its style is dated -- fascinatingly dated, one might add -- the issues it raises aren't, as long as manipulation, humiliation and abuse continue to thrive on the menu of human relationships.
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9/10
night today
andrabem6 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
"Noite Vazia" is (as far as I know) the best and most accomplished film of Walter Hugo Khouri. In spite of being obviously inspired by Antonioni, Khouri made with "Noite Vazia" his most personal film (as far as I know, because the majority of his films were not released on DVD).

In the first moments "Noite Vazia" shows São Paulo in the night - the skyscrapers, the avenues, the streetlights, lit windows on the buildings, and car lights moving and blinking. A huge landscape where loneliness and meaningless prevail.

The film has four main characters. Luisinho (Mario Benvenutti), Nelson (Gabriele Tinti), Regina (Odete Lara) and Mara (Norma Bengell).

Luisinho is married and has a son. He arrives home from work, only to leave soon after, saying briskly goodbye to his son and wife (she is standing at the threshold of the door and we barely see her face). He drives his car out. On the way he picks up his friend Nelson.

Nelson has just had a discussion with his girlfriend. Their relationship seems to have lost the fire. Words are useless now. In their farewell he goes down an escalator and she stands silent, without moving, near the escalator. She becomes smaller and more distant. He walks on. On the street, Luisinho's car is waiting for him. Nelson enters the car.

Luisinho (Mario Benvenutti) and Nelson (Gabriele Tinti) are going for a night out in São Paulo. They are looking for something new, for some real excitement, but their nights, as Nelson says disgustedly, always end the same way.

They go to several different restaurants and nightclubs, until by chance, they meet Regina (Odete Lara) and Mara (Norma Bengell). Regina and Mara are high class prostitutes. They four of them go to Luisinho's "bachelor apartment".

The four characters spend there the night together. Outside, the city looms darker and darker as time goes by. Inside..... (see the film if you want to know).

The day breaks, the "meaningless night" ("Noite Vazia") is succeeded by a still more hopeless day. The four of them are swallowed by the city's labyrinth. Another day in the life.

"Noite Vazia" portrays the high middle class and its universe and does it in a very sensitive way, but it's still too much influenced by Antonioni. Even so, "Noite Vazia" is a very good film. It has unity and a sense of purpose that films like "Corpo Ardente" and "As Amorosas" tried in vain to achieve. It really deserves to be seen.
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7/10
A Good Movie About Loneliness, Selfishness and Dullness in a Big City
claudio_carvalho20 November 2003
Luis (Mário Benvenutti) is a married man with a son, but having a tiresome life. Nelson (Gabriele Tinti) is his companion of 'chasing women' and is permanently in a existentialistic crisis. One night, they meet Regina (Odete Lara) and Mara (Norma Bengell), two whores of São Paulo, and they four spend the night together in Luis' apartment. Many acid dialogs between these four characters happen along the night. In the morning, they say good bye to each other.

Noite Vazia ('Empty Night' is the correct translation of the title) is a movie about loneliness, selfishness and dullness of persons living in a big city. The black & white photography and the shadows of this movie and the dialogs between the characters are great. It is indeed a very intimate film. Most of the scenes are internal. Again, although being an expensive DVD, this film has not been restored. However, the quality of image of this movie is not so bad as in 'As Amorosas' or 'O Corpo Ardente'. The cast and direction have a great performance. Further, this movie is not indicated for any audience. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): Noite Vazia ("Empty Night")
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8/10
Like Antonioni, but much better
guisreis1 December 2023
It is hard to think about this film by Brazilian skilled director Walter Hugo Khouri without conpating him with Antioni's famous trilogy. Besides also being released in early 60's (with dance party chaotic scenes which were so recurrent in the films from that decade), and having an awesome black and white cinematography as one of its greatest merits, it has the very same core issue: the futility of bourgeoisie, its lack of sincere goals, its frenzy for distracting those shallow minds. However, Khouri's "Empty Nights" (this is the translation of Brazilian title, much better than dumb English name, "Men and Women") is by far a deeper, better developped and less problematic movie than Antonioni's "La Notte" and "L'Eclisse" (I have not watched L'Avventura yet). The film also addresses other issues that would eventually re-appear in his filmography, such as middle and upper classes' hypocrisy and misogyny.
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7/10
alienation and boredom in the big city
andibux-125 July 2002
Walter Hugo Khouri was in the beginning influenced by Bergman (as you can notice in "O Estranho Encontro" and then by Antonioni, as in "Noite Vazia". This film has reminded me "L'Eclisse", but the city portrayed is São Paulo not Milan.
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