Movie Review "City of God(2002)"
City of God is more than a film, it is a reality for some people, unrelenting journey through the human despair, it’s one of those movies where you watch it once and it leaves a long lasting memory and don’t even need to rewatch. The movie is set in the lawless favelas of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the story is told through the eyes of Rocket, a young boy caught between the allure of crime and the dream of becoming a photographer. His voice is the lens through which we see a generation of boys swallowed whole by a system that offered them only violence What makes City of God so captivating is not just the violence, but its brutal honesty. The children, some no older than ten, hold guns like toys and die with eyes still wide with wonder, this is unlike other films in which you can usually anticipate that the child in the movie is not going to die no matter the circumstance or the plot, city of god is not like that. The film doesn’t just show us how innocence is lost, it shows how it was never even allowed to exist from the onset. This film makes one of the most authentic depictions of life in underprivileged areas, and violence filled areas
Li’l Zé is one of the most unforgettable and horrifying characters, not because he is evil in the traditional sense, but because City of God in general reveals how evil can be shaped by environment, trauma, and power. He is not born a monster. He is made one, his transformation into Li’l Zé is terrifying, not because it’s sudden, but because it’s so expected within the world of the favela. As a child, he’s the one who pushes his older friends into committing a robbery. He doesn’t rob for survival, he does it for the thrill, the control. The moment in the film where he sneaks back into the motel to carry out a massacre, you realize you’re watching the birth of a sociopath, He isn’t content with money or territory, he also wants fear. He thrives on control, needing to humiliate, to break people, to remind them that he is God in the City of God, Li’l Zé’s demise is sudden and unceremonious. He isn’t taken down by a rival kingpin, but by a group of children smaller versions of himself. That moment hits like prophecy, the cycle hasn’t ended, it continues. This film does not end with peace or redemption. It ends with the next generation picking up where the last left off, a cruel cycle repeating itself. And yet, in Rocket’s final frame, there is a whisper of hope that stories can be told, that maybe witnessing is a form of resistance, and maybe that’s where healing can begin.
There’s a sick poetry to how the film captures beauty amid the madness. The cinematography is raw yet intoxicating, the use of natural lighting and handheld shots gives it a documentary like realism that makes the viewer feel like a silent witness. What elevates City of God beyond being just a crime drama is its humanity. It never forgets that these are not just statistics, but boys and girls with dreams, humor, jealousy, and moments of tenderness. Even in the bleakest corners, it finds flickers of life a smile, a dance, a photo, or children riding a bike. The tragedy is all the more painful because you see what could have been.
City of God is a masterpiece and I believe I one of the highest rated films on IMBD, because it refuses to look away. It asks us not to either. It’s a film that stays with you, not because of the gunshots or the heartbreak, but because it dares to tell the truth with unflinching clarity and deep compassion. It literally doesn't get any better than City of God and the fact that you sometimes forget that you are even reading subtitles the whole movie is just the cherry on the cream. You just cant help but tear up while watching this film, its so emotional.
Rocket's story is powerful. ✊ A raw & unforgettable film! Leaves you thinking long after.