City of God

If you run, the beast catches you; if you stay, the beast eats you.

8.4
20022h 9m

In the poverty-stricken favelas of Rio de Janeiro in the 1970s, two young men choose different paths. Rocket is a budding photographer who documents the increasing drug-related violence of his neighborhood, while José “Zé” Pequeno is an ambitious drug dealer diving into a dangerous life of crime.

Production

Logo for O2 Filmes
Logo for VideoFilmes
Logo for Wild Bunch

Available For Free On

Logo for Kanopy

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Destiny

Destiny

Thumbnail for video: Looking for Paradise

Looking for Paradise

Thumbnail for video: Man Down

Man Down

Thumbnail for video: The Gangster Life

The Gangster Life

Thumbnail for video: Lesson Learned

Lesson Learned

Thumbnail for video: Getting Out

Getting Out

Thumbnail for video: The Getaway

The Getaway

Thumbnail for video: The Turf

The Turf

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: The Tender Trio

The Tender Trio

Cast

Photo of Alexandre Rodrigues

Alexandre Rodrigues

Buscapé - Rocket

Photo of Leandro Firmino

Leandro Firmino

Zé Pequeno - Li'l Zé

Photo of Phellipe Haagensen

Phellipe Haagensen

Bené - Benny

Photo of Douglas Silva

Douglas Silva

Dadinho - Li'l Dice

Photo of Jonathan Haagensen

Jonathan Haagensen

Cabeleira - Shaggy

Photo of Matheus Nachtergaele

Matheus Nachtergaele

Sandro Cenoura - Carrot

Photo of Seu Jorge

Seu Jorge

Mané Galinha - Knockout Ned

Photo of Jefechander Suplino

Jefechander Suplino

Alicate - Clipper

Photo of Alice Braga

Alice Braga

Angélica

Photo of Edson Oliveira

Edson Oliveira

Barbantinho Adulto - Older Stringy

Photo of Michel Gomes

Michel Gomes

Bené Criança - Young Benny

Photo of Roberta Rodrigues

Roberta Rodrigues

Berenice - Bernice

Photo of Luis Otávio

Luis Otávio

Buscapé Criança - Young Rocket

Photo of Kiko Marques

Kiko Marques

Cabeção - Melonhead

Photo of Gustavo Engracia

Gustavo Engracia

Editor do Jornal - Rogerio Reis

Photo of Darlan Cunha

Darlan Cunha

Filé-com-Fritas - Steak and Fries

Photo of Graziella Moretto

Graziella Moretto

Marina Cintra

Photo of Renato de Souza

Renato de Souza

Marreco - Goose

Photo of Sabrina Rosa

Sabrina Rosa

Namorada do Galinha - Knockout's Girlfriend

More Like This

Reviews

C

Crazypiglady

It’s a great film and well worthy of its the respect it has. It’s gruelling too, the 18 rating is due to the thread running through the film of continuous and ruthless violence of gangs trying to control their drug area. The is the story told through the eyes of ‘Rocket’ who avoids getting in to the gang war of his brother and friends by trying to find a safer life.

The film combines slick production without losing a genuine documentary feel which I think it is why it’s so enduring. While it achieves a feeling of reality, it isn’t specifically a true story. However, the Cidade de Deus is real (being created to rehouse the slums away from Rio de Janeiro) and this story of its underworld and the film’s production makes one believe it may not be too far from the truth. There is hope in the story but not a lot.

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

Told by way of an occasionally narrated retrospective, "Rocket" (Alexandre Rodrigues) tells us a story of his childhood in the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. Growing up in a community of newly built boxes, without power or plumbing, that reminded me of a row of concrete beach huts, the community is pretty lawless. The crime is largely to confined to pettier crimes, but as aspirations grow so does the scale of the criminality. A raid on a motel-cum-brothel is supposed to make everyone extra cash, but their inventive young watchman "Li'l Dice" (Douglas Silva) hates being left out and so does a little augmenting of his own. Brutal and attention grabbing. Next the cops crack down, bodies pile up and the societal order starts to change. It's this young man who grows up into the leading drug-peddling hoodlum amongst a now much more developed township where, tempered only by his more diplomatic childhood friend "Bené" (Phellipe Haagensen), the newly named "Li'l Zé" (Leandro Firmino) is ruling the roost. Curiously, his own form of government proves more stable for the residents, and although many are addicts there is a certain degree of law-and-order. Then the runts start to intervene. These are the young children with no hope, no families and only the dream of becoming their own version of "Li'l Zé" one day too. Gradually, the empire expands until it's only "Carrot" (Matheus Nachtergaele) who stands against him. When tragedy strikes very close to home for the kingpin, though, the uneasy peace between the two sections breaks out into an open warfare that drags in the sharpshooting army vet "Knockout Ned" (Seu Jorge), arms all the enthusiastic children and creates an environment that isn't safe for anyone - and where the police keep their distance in the hope that they will just all just slaughter each other. It's lucky that "Rocket" can use a camera. His boss wants publicity to illustrate how dominant and powerful he is. The newspapers want the photographs too. If the young man can walk the tightrope carefully, he might find himself well placed to capitalise on his unique access to a story that by now is gripping their nation. This is a fascinatingly well put together depiction of the worst of human nature; a dog eat dog world, where traditional humanity is scarce and the virtues of a not so benign dictatorship are exposed for all to see. The characterisations are mostly brutal and exploitative, yet there is a place for love and loyalty too amidst a poverty stricken population that craves basics like food and running water and is oblivious to death in the streets. The story is well supplemented by some engaging supporting characters like "Steak n' Fries", "Goose", "Shaggy" and "Thiago" (Daniel Zettel or is it really Timothée Chalamet?). The writing delivers powerfully but sparingly. We don't have loads of waffling dialogue, and there's also quite a bit of dark humour contained to not so much lighten the mood as to enhance the perception amongst most of the population that kill or be killed was a perfectly reasonable mantra. Firmino, Haagensen and Rodrigues deliver extremely well here in this most impressively photographed and intense look at a society where the top dog was only top by feeding and starving his followers. It's not especially graphic, I found, just a poignant look at survival of the fittest, the shrewdest and the luckiest. There's also a distinct lack of religiosity throughout, too! If you can see this at a cinema, then do - it's based on a true story and isn't an easy watch.

You've reached the end.