Rita Azevedo Gomes

Born: 1952-01-01

Rita Azevedo Gomes (born c. 1952) is an award-winning Portuguese film director. Her career dates from the early 70s and spans cinema, theatre and opera. In 2001 she presented her work in various film festivals including Venice, Montreal, and Turin. Altar (2002) won the prize for best director at the Angra do Heroísmo international film festival and premiered in Portugal in September 2002. This was followed in 2004 by A 15ª Pedra: Manoel de Oliveira e João Bénard da Costa em Conversa Filmada, which was shown at the Marseille, Procida and Doclisboa film festivals in 2005, as well in The Ancient Art Museum and Serralves Foundation. Also in 2005, she was commissioned by Faro Capital da Cultura to direct The Conquest of Faro, which was presented at the 2005 Turin Film Festival and had its national premiere in Faro in December 2005. A Colecção Invisível (The Invisible Collection, 2009) will have its premier in Lisbon at the Cinemateca Portuguesa. Her most recent film, A Portuguesa (The Portuguese), inspired in Robert Musil’s novel Die Portugiesin, is in post-production.


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What Now? Remind Me

as Self
Released: 2014-08-08

Joaquim Pinto has been living with HIV and VHC for almost twenty years. “What now? Remind Me” is...

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Danses Macabres, Skeletons, and Other Fantasies

as uncredited
Released: 2019-07-12

Two film directors and a writer are in Portugal for an expedition through various images,...

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Life Lasts Two Days

as uncredited
Released: 2022-07-08

Rómulo's quiet routine in Rio de Janeiro changes overnight when an accident starts a wave of...

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No Tempo do Cinema

as Herself
Released: 2006-05-21

A 58 minute documentary about the life of João Bénard da Costa.

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Principiantes

as uncredited
Released: 2018-06-20

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A Portuguese Film

as Herself
Released: 2011-10-28

A documentary about the world of portuguese cinema, with interviews with some critics and directors.

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O Construtor de Anjos

as uncredited
Released: 1978-01-01

Gothic film in a monastery, where sensual monks murder the children they receive, with images of...

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Karl Martin

as uncredited
Released: 1974-01-01

An “artist film” that crosses Karl Martin, Martin Heidegger and the Communist Party’s Manifesto.

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