Review
Honestly the film started out slow and I wasn't sure where it was going in the first part.
The second part cranked up fast and the audience becomes quickly engrossed in Aurora's past and her life in Africa. One completely understands her melancholy and longing for her past when you compare her farm on Mount Tabu to her life in Lisbon.
Aurora's verboten romance with Gian Luca quickly builds up and the audience can feel the longing and how Aurora felt trapped with her pleasant husband.
The saddest part for me was when Gian Luca played the drums to the Ronette's song and his entire demeanor is crushed and devastated.
The film ends satisfactorily although the tragic ending of Gian Luca's romance with Aurora is well... sad and unfortunate.
Miguel Gomes did an excellent job in this film and the actor Carlo Carlotta did wonderfully as did Ana Moreira. Teresa Madruga did great as the audience's eyes and ears.
Lastly I thoroughly enjoyed the use of black and white cinema for the Africa part of the film. It threw modern Lisbon into relief and made it seem even more drastically different.