Please upgrade your browser

For the best experience, you should upgrade your browser. Visit our accessibility page to view a list of supported browsers along with links to download the latest version.

Student Showcase Archive

José Filipe Costa

PhD Work

PhD work

Cinema Forges the Event: Filmmaking and the case of Thomas Harlan’s Torre Bela


The film_ Red Line_ and accompanying thesis revisit the documentary Torre Bela (1975) by Thomas Harlan and its memory, reflecting upon the role cinema played in the revolutionary process in Portugal in 1975 and its enduring significance to the collective memory of this event. It makes a forensic investigation of the context for this documentary, examining not only the history of the occupation of the Torre Bela estate in central Portugal, but also the wider unfolding of the PREC (Processo Revolucionário em Curso/ongoing revolutionary period, 1974–5), the history of documentaries produced during this period and their critical reception.


Since the earliest forms of revolutionary filmmaking, cinema has been theorised as a medium that has the capacity to establish new relationships between different subjects and worlds, to amplify perceptions, to privilege certain protagonists and situations and give form to particular effects and experiences. The making of the film _Torre Bela _forged new relationships between different worlds and provided a forum for new protagonists who had never before expressed themselves politically in the past, in keeping with the revolutionary ideal of the Carnation Revolution that took place on 25 April 1974.


Info

Info

  • PhD

    School

    School of Communication

    Programme

    Visual Communication–2012

  • Cinema Forges the Event: Filmmaking and the case of Thomas Harlan’s Torre Bela


    The film_ Red Line_ and accompanying thesis revisit the documentary Torre Bela (1975) by Thomas Harlan and its memory, reflecting upon the role cinema played in the revolutionary process in Portugal in 1975 and its enduring significance to the collective memory of this event. It makes a forensic investigation of the context for this documentary, examining not only the history of the occupation of the Torre Bela estate in central Portugal, but also the wider unfolding of the PREC (Processo Revolucionário em Curso/ongoing revolutionary period, 1974–5), the history of documentaries produced during this period and their critical reception.


    Since the earliest forms of revolutionary filmmaking, cinema has been theorised as a medium that has the capacity to establish new relationships between different subjects and worlds, to amplify perceptions, to privilege certain protagonists and situations and give form to particular effects and experiences. The making of the film _Torre Bela _forged new relationships between different worlds and provided a forum for new protagonists who had never before expressed themselves politically in the past, in keeping with the revolutionary ideal of the Carnation Revolution that took place on 25 April 1974.


  • Experience

  • Lecturer, IADE (Institute of Art and Design), Lisbon, present; Collaborator, UNIDCOM/IADE, (Research Unit in Design and Communications), Lisbon, present
  • Exhibitions

  • Linha Vermelha (Red Line), Film, 2011; Entre Muros (In Between Walls), Film (co-director), 2002; A Rua (Outside), Short film, 2008; Domingo (Sunday), Short film, 2005
  • Awards

  • Best Portuguese Feature Film, IndieLisboa, Festival Internacional de Cinema Independente, 2011; Selected, Viennale, Vienna International Film Festival, Austria, 2011; Selected, 15° Festival de Cinema Luso-Brasileiro, Santa Maria da Feira, 2011
  • Publications

  • O cinema ao Poder! (Power to the cinema!), Author, 2002