Walter Salles, a Brazilian film director, is known for his powerful and evocative films. Works like "Central Station" and "The Motorcycle Diaries" have garnered international acclaim for their emotional depth and social relevance. Salles' contributions to cinema have helped bring Brazilian film to a global audience.

"There are still 500,000 persons afflicted with leprosy in Latin America, so it is still very much present."



"We all knew the book well because it's the cult book in Latin America. For me, this was a sacred territory. I would not have ventured into it by myself."



"On the contrary, I'm a strong believer in the necessity of imperfection coming into the film."



"No, I worked a lot for European television, doing documentaries in Brazil."



"Also, I knew that the impact of Motorcycle Diaries was going to be so resonant for all of us who went through the experience of making it that I didn't want to do anything that could reflect it."


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"Also, there are now new laws in Brazil which create incentives for Argentine and Latin American films to be premiered and distributed in Brazil and vice versa."



"The necessity to conceptualise has to come very early on, and defining a vector of development for that film also at the beginning of the process will allow you much more freedom as you go along."

