Director: | Miguel Faria Jr. |
Producer: | Caíque Martins Ferreira Marcelo Laffitte |
Starring: | Joaquim de Almeida Anthony O'Donnell Maria de Medeiros Marco Nanini |
Music: | Edu Lobo |
Cinematography: | Lauro Escorel |
Editing: | Diana Vasconcellos |
Studio: | Sky Light Cinema |
Distributor: | Columbia Pictures |
Runtime: | 124 minutes |
Country: | Brazil Portugal |
Language: | Portuguese English French Italian Spanish |
Budget: | R$4–10 million[1] [2] |
Gross: | R$2,275,052[3] |
O Xangô de Baker Street (English title: A Samba for Sherlock) is 2001 Brazilian-Portuguese film directed by Miguel Faria Jr., based on the novel of the same name by Jô Soares. The film was first announced in 1996, but filming only started in September 1998 in Porto, Portugal,[4] lasting until 1999.[5]
Rio de Janeiro, 1886. Actress Sarah Bernhardt performs at the city's Municipal Theater, captivating the local audience enthralled by French culture. The city is at her feet, and even the Emperor Pedro II comes to pay his respects. He confides a secret to her: the disappearance of a precious Stradivarius violin presented by him to the charming widow Baroness Maria Luiza. The actress suggests to the monarch to hire her friend, the legendary British detective Sherlock Holmes, to solve the case. Subsequently, a brutal murder shocks the city, and leaves the police superintendent Mello Pimenta: a prostitute had been killed and mutilated, her ears cut off and a violin string strategically placed on her body by the perpetrator. Later, under the heat of the tropical sun, the lives of Holmes and Doctor Watson are changed forever, as they find themselves neck-deep in a cultural milieu that portrays all standard Brazilian stereotypes.