Thursday, March 12, 2026

Kleber Mendonça Filho | O Agente Secreto (The Secret Agent) / 2025

unintentional revolutionaries

by Douglas Messerli

 

Kleber Mendonça Filho (screenwriter and director) O Agente Secreto (The Secret Agent) / 2025

 

By far one of the very best films, if not the best of 2025 was Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent. Although Kleber Mendonça Filho cited a slew of films as influence, including John Boorman's Point Blank (1967), Karel Kachyňa's The Ear (1970), Elio Petri's Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (1970), Jorge Bodanzky and Orlando Senna's Iracema (1974), Héctor Babenco's Lúcio Flávio (1977), Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), and Eduardo Coutinho's Twenty Years Later (1984), to me the film closest in style and impact is Costa-Gavras’ 1969 movie Z, a political thriller like The Secret Agent that has far more real human political consequences than the science fiction fantasy world of Close Encounters or Spielberg’s Jaws (1975), which threads a path through Mendonça Filho’s work through our hero, Armando Solimões’ (Wagner Moura) life. His young son Fernando (Enzo Nunes) is fascinated by the imagery of the poster; and events surrounding a shark discovered with a human leg in its mouth, weave their way through a journalistic trope about the murder and harassment of gay men enjoying sex in a local public park.

    The time is 1977, in the midst of the Brazilian military dictatorship when the government is run more like a mafia that controls through murder and threats. Armando, a former university researcher who as chair of his department has openly offended the former Eletrobras executive director Henrique Ghirotti who has come to close down his active research department, planning to pick of various faculty members for his own organization and to delete any possible forms of competition. He is a brutally rude individual who, the night before his meeting with the faculty, at a dinner party offends Armando and his wife Fátima Nascimento (Alice Carvalho), who is a teacher, by referring to her as his secretary and treating her as if she were chattel. Before the evening is over, she speaks out vehemently against Ghirotti’s behavior and the night ends with the usually unaggressive Armando slugging out the executive.

     Fatima, Armando’s wife dies soon after, presumably of pneumonia; but we wouldn’t be surprised if she were, like Armando, quickly put on a government hit list and killed



     The film begins, in fact, with Armando running for his life in an attempt to reach a revolutionary safe house in Recife (the city at the center of nearly all of Mendonça Filho’s films). A simple stop to get gas in a rural outpost, demonstrates the brutal world of the day. A dead man lay rotting at some distance from the station, the police having refused to even pick up the body since it’s carnival time. And yet policemen are sent out to investigate the driver of Armando’s yellow Volkswagen. Although they can find nothing wrong, the police still demand a bribe. Since he has just paid out his last Real, he offers them an almost empty pack of cigarettes instead and drives away, the body remaining in place with the gas attendant having to chase off packs of wild dogs.

     We are, as the written narrative reports—in a vast understatement—in a time of mischief.


    Armando arrives none too soon to the underground hideaway, a sort of boarding house filled with people whose lives are threatened, run by a former designated “arnarcho-communist” Dona Sebastiana (the wonderful Tânia Maria). The “refugees” in her safe house include a married couple of Angolan Civil War refugees,Thereza Vitória and Antonio (Isabél Zuaa and Licínio Januário), a single woman with whom Armando has sex, Claudia (Hermila Guedes), a young gay boy Clóvis (Robson Andrade) who helps Dona Sebastiana with household chores, and others. Perhaps the major difference between a work like Z and this movie is that in Costa-Gavras’ work most of the central figures are, in fact, politically involved in in an overthrow of the government, while these individuals have simply been named as Communist and threats because of often minor and even sexual grievances.

     To protect his identity, Armando’s name has been changed to Marcelo Alves. An entire film might have been made focusing simply on these remarkably frightened but brave individuals, all unique human beings worth more attention than this movie has to give them. And their one group meeting when several admit their real names and the Angolan couple give away their secret about fleeing soon to Sweden, is one of the most moving scenes in the film.


     But the pleasure of The Secret Agent is its vast scope of seemingly unrelated events, some of which we at first can only comprehend as incidental scenes, that make the film seem almost like a dream never to be fully understood until the pieces begin locking into place to make a coherent image a bit like an extraordinarily large picture puzzle. Even the incidents I have so far revealed are expressed in his essay far more coherently that they are in the movie where we have to connect fragments of conversations and scenes cut out of the chronological pattern of the whole.

    For example, why does the film suddenly cut to the Department of Oceanography, where the have just discovered a tiger shark with a human leg inside its mouth. And why are the corrupt Civil Police chief Euclides and his sons Sergio and Arlindo among the first at the sight, desperate to close down the news of the incident before the newspapers get word of it?  Eventually, we learn that the leg belongs to an individual who was probably killed by the police, the body tossed into the Capibaribe River.


     The sons are later instructed to steal the leg and toss it back into the dark waters, which becomes the subject of later newspaper sensationalist folklore when it supposedly attacks the gay men and female prostitutes openly engaging  in sex in the local park, killing numerous of them. The strange story of the “hairy leg” is based on real incidents in the late 1970s, according to Globo.com, written about in the Pernambuco Daily (Diário de Pernambuco) which allowed the press to disguise censored news about police violence, corruption, and homophobia that took place in the Brazilian Military Dictatorship. Daily reports of the return of “the hairy leg” revealed bodies and sometimes names of victims who might otherwise have gone unrecognized.

     We soon also discover that also in Recife live Armando/Marcelo’s father-in-law, Sr. Alexandre (Carlos Francisco) and his wife’s mother who are looking after our hero's young son Fernando, whom Armando hopes to take with him when he escapes. It is the boy who is fixated on the film Jaws even though Armando and Sr. Alexandre, who works as a projectionist at the city’s major art film theater the Cinema São Luiz, do not think that the dream-ridden boy should be subjected to given violent images that the film presents. But as we later discover at the end of this work, once his grandfather actually allows him to see the film, his nightmares come to an end. The truth (at least as presented in art) is obviously the solvent to many of our internal fears, a theme that is also explored throughout this movie.

     Meanwhile, the underground group of Recife arrange for Armando/Marcelo to be employed in the Institute for Identification where he often gets an upfront seat on police investigations and where he can peruse the archives to find more information about his mother, who was evidently married by his father when she was a 14-year old servant, an example of the racial inequalities that still exist in Brazil today and are often referenced in Mendonça Filho’s films.


    From the beginning Police Chief Euclides, probably simply to keep a close eye on him, offers Marcelo his protection, insisting he join him and his son on a visit to a local tailor Hans (Udo Kier in his last cinema role) who, because he speaks German, Euclides is convinced must have been a German war soldier, forcing him, despite Hans’ retreat to a back room, to show him his scarred legs and chest as he and his sons laugh; in actually, as Armando/Marcelo perceives, Hans is a German Jew who has suffered in the camps during the Holocaust. Our hero, accordingly, gets a clear view of just how ugly and bigoted Recife’s city police have become.

     Another theme in this director’s works of cinema is the split in cultures between southern Brazil where sit the major cities of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro and the north where Recife and other major cities are located. The urban coastal south, the center of Brazilian culture and industry, looks down at the more agriculturally dependent north, another theme played out in this and other works by the same director.

     So it is with a sense of slight fracture that the film suddenly presents us with a scene in São Paulo where the vengeful now former Eletrobras executive Ghirotti calls on two guns for hire, Augusto Borba (Roney Villela) and his nephew Bobbi (Gabriel Leone). Ghirotti wants Armando/Marcelo not only killed but with a hole in his mouth, obviously a punishment for his speaking out against his dissolution of the important research group of Pernambuco.


    After a scene of a brutal murder they have committed, the body of which they also dispose of into a river, we are quickly returned to Recife where in a secret meeting at the Cinema São Luiz, Armando/Marcelo meets up with one of the leaders of the underground group, Elza (Maria Fernanda Cândido) who asks him to tape his history, particularly the scene with Ghirotti, and sadly must tell Armando that he is now on a death list and must leave as soon as possible; but since his own passport will reveal his identity, he must wait for 4 more days for a forged document.

     Suddenly, with horrific speed, the formerly slow-moving film tumbles into a series of quick events as Augusto and Bobbi arrive in Recife and hire a local gunman Vilmar (Kaiony Venâncio) to track down Armando/Marcelo and carry out the brutal vendetta.

     It is in these last scenes of the film where Armando finally lets himself be momentarily swept up by the Carnival that has been going on through most of the film, and during which hundreds of people have been murdered, many of them by the police themselves, as we have already witnessed in the “hairy leg murders” tales.

     It is in this context that our hero also meets up with his fellow “refugees,” the group basically saying goodbye to one another, with Dona Sebastiana recalling her early days in Italy when she first became a kind of "unintentional revolutionary."

     Vilmar, through bribes of the second projectionist at the famed art theater is able to track down Sr. Alexandre, and through a letter he has left in his office desk, the current address of Armando, whom he finally tracks down to the Institute for Identification where he now pretends to work.

     Vilmar, moreover, is being tracked by Bobbi, just to make certain that he accomplishes the task.

When Armando spots Vilmar at his offices, he finally is forced to take up the offer of protection Police Chief Euclides, who, despite is own murderous actions, appears to be suspicious of the visit of Southern hitmen such as Augusto and Bobbi, whom they quite literally take “for a ride,” making it clear that they are not appreciated in Recife, and probably behind the reason the two have hired a local to actually commit the act.

    Armando demands Euclides protect him, having witnessed, he argues, a man harassing others in his office. Euclides sends his son Arlindo and another “soldier,” to checkout Vilmar. The moment they confront them, he shoots them both several times, killing Arlindo, the other wounding Vilmar before he too dies in the street, a police car quickly arriving to scoop up their bodies, two more men having died mysterious deaths whose cause will never be revealed.

     Bobbi, still on Vilmar’s track follows the trail of his blood to a barbershop, which when he enters he discovers to be empty. From behind Vilmar shoots him dead, before he escapes.

     Certainly, this is perhaps almost too much plot to even assimilate, but necessary, I argue, to explain fully what this thriller is all about. 

    Throughout, moreover, there have been two other scenes that seem almost inexplicable until, once again, the events are interlinked with the larger plot. Two women are listening to tapes—the ones we have earlier seen Elza record in Cinema São Luiz while interviewing Armando. These woman, who soon discern, exist in the present day, are transcribing the tapes of the underground during the dictatorship. One in particular, Lenira Nascimento (Aline Marta Maia) is deeply moved by Armando’s voice and his story about his encounters with Ghirotti, whose horrific acts have turned his normal life into a hell.

     Even here, however, we learn that the tapes are now being recalled back to headquarters since they have been discovered perhaps to contain sensitive information. Was this, we can only ask, in the days Jair Bolsonaro (2019–2023), calling back all attempts to actually discover past truths like the current US president, Donald Trump?

     No matter, Lenira has secretly recorded the tapes, herself becoming part of an underground of information. She makes an appointment with Fernando, Armando Solimões’ son (also played by Wagner Moura). A middle-age doctor in a blood-bank, formerly the very theater in which he finally saw Jaws, he seems under-whelmed by any news of his father’s death, which we now know was a murder that happened even despite the momentary escape we witness in the film. He remembers absolutely nothing about his father, even though his grandfather has long reminded him of how he dressed and waited for his appearance to take him away.

     Regarding his grandmother, who Armando had so desperately sought to learn more about, the older Fernando is convinced it was simply a marriage of servitude, but has since learned that they named her “India” and even described his father as sometimes being addressed by the same name. But he seems totally disinterested in history. Has he too become a kind of vampire, demanding Lenira donate blood before he will even speak with her?

      The researcher, an ironic designation since Armando was once described just as that, still insists, despite the fact that Fernando may find it difficult to hear, that he might wish to listen to them; handing him a stick disk of the illegally saved tapes. Fernando finally puts it in his pocket as she leaves him, she explaining that although she came all the way from São Paulo to communicate with him, she does also have family here which she will now be able to visit. Her last name being Nascimento it is highly likely that she may be related to Armando’s now dead wife, Fernando’s forgotten mother. But alas they may never come to realize that fact, just as, sadly, he may never choose to listen to his father’s voice from the past, the story we, the audience, have just so passionately suffered through.

    Yet finally we realize that it is not Armando or any of his cohorts, but this young woman who is the secret agent, the one able to provide the following generation with a history that might help them to remember and heal without her even knowing of her agency, her role in other’s lives.

     Time has way of erasing the horrible events of the past, which why later generations keep repeating the former's behavior, generation after generation making the same mistakes again and again: the lack of human understanding and compassion, the support of leaders who care more for their own power and enrichment than the betterment of the citizens they are supposed to lead.

     This film was written for our times.

 

Los Angeles, March 12, 2026

Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog (March 2026).

 

My Queer Cinema Index [with former World Cinema Review titles]

https://myqueercinema.blogspot.com/2023/12/former-index-to-world-cinema-review.html Films discussed (listed alphabetically by director) [For...