Entertainment

Brazil’s El Agente Secreto Wins Big by Refusing Hollywood Imitation

Brazilian filmmakers are landing major awards and attention with a film set in 1977 Brazil, built on local tradition, not imitation. Behind the applause lies a policy fight over public funding, cultural sovereignty, and the cost of keeping national cinema alive.

A Film Where Brazil Refuses to Be Background

There is a particular kind of pride that spreads quietly when a national film breaks out, especially one like El Agente Secreto, which highlights Brazil’s cultural resilience and political voice. Not chest-thumping, not the type that needs a flag. More like a slight, stubborn relief. This week, it has a name in Brazil: El Agente Secreto. This movie has won two Golden Globes and received four Oscar nominations, putting Brazil back in the cultural spotlight for a second consecutive year.

The micro-scene that stays with you is a choice made within the film itself, showcasing Brazil’s unique storytelling that makes the audience feel admiration for its depth and authenticity.

“Brazil is one more character, wonderfully portrayed,” Renata Almeida Magalhães told EFE.

Magalhães is the president of the Brazilian Academy of Cinema, the organization that selects the film that represents the country in international awards. Her job sits at the crossroads of art and institutional machinery, and she talks like someone who has learned that taste and policy are never entirely separate.

Kleber Mendonça Filho directs El Agente Secreto, and in Magalhães’s telling, one of the film’s richest qualities is its ability to reveal strangeness. Not in a cheap, exotic way. Strangeness, as in unseen worlds, urban legends, and scenarios foreign to audiences already familiar with Brazil. The trouble is that foreign markets often want a single Brazil, flattened into postcard certainty. What this film offers, she argues, is a difference that does not ask permission.

In a world that rewards familiarity, strangeness can be a sales strategy. That is the paradox she points to. The international appeal, she suggests, comes from going deeper into Brazil’s singularity rather than sanding it down—its Indigenous, European, and African roots, not as a slogan but as a texture.

“Without wanting to be a copy of Hollywood, we are going deep into our difference, into our singularity,” she told EFE.

You can hear the subtext: for years, Brazilian cinema has been asked, implicitly and sometimes explicitly, to make itself legible on someone else’s terms.

Film director Renata Almeida. EFE/ Daniel González/ FILE

Box Office Pride Meets a Hard Domestic Reality

The international trophies are real. So is the domestic turnout. El Agente Secreto has already surpassed 1.5 million viewers in Brazil, a number that stands out in a market where national films often struggle to compete with imported spectacle.

Here is the everyday observation that sits underneath that statistic, implied by the notes and hard to ignore. Going to the movies is a choice people make with limited time and money, and in Brazil, like much of Latin America, the default choice has often been foreign. The notes cite data compiled by Ancine, Brazil’s national film agency, through August, showing that last year, only one in ten Brazilians who went to the cinema watched a national film. That is not a taste problem alone. It is an ecosystem problem.

Magalhães argues that in a world as disturbed as this one, Brazilian audiences are rediscovering something they had been trained to doubt. Brazil can be compelling on its own terms. Brazil can be a lens, not only an object viewed through someone else’s lens.

She frames it as moving past an American model of seeing the world and not rejecting the United States as a fact, but rejecting the assumption that the United States is the template.

The trouble is that film does not travel as pure art. It travels with power.

There is a moment in the notes where Magalhães, identified as the producer of Deus é Brasileiro, shifts into a kind of blunt historical realism. She describes how the United States understood long ago that cinema is a tool. Where its films go, its culture arrives.

“Never can we forget that Hollywood was conceived as a state policy by Roosevelt,” she told EFE. “The policy of the ‘three Fs.’ The film follows a flag that is something thought out. Motion Pictures headquarters are not in Hollywood; they are next to the White House.”

That line lands because it names what Latin Americans often sense without saying. Culture is not soft in its effects. It is infrastructure. It is persuasion. It is a long-term export that does not need tariffs to shape what people desire.

So when a Brazilian film breaks out globally, it is not only a creative victory. It is a sovereignty argument that suddenly has receipts.

A man dressed up as Brazilian actor Wagner Moura talks on the phone during a look-alike contest in São Paulo, Brazil. EFE/ Isaac Fontana

The Policy Fight Behind the Applause

El Agente Secreto is also, in a quiet way, a policy story. It is a film with an estimated budget of a little over five million dollars. The notes place that beside a competing example from the U.S. market, One Battle After Another by Paul Thomas Anderson, with spending estimated at around 140 million dollars, according to Nash Information Services. The comparison is not meant to shame anyone. It is intended to demonstrate scale.

Brazil is not trying to outspend Hollywood. It is trying to survive next to it.

Magalhães emphasizes that public policy is essential for the survival and growth of cinema, inspiring the audience to see policy as a tool for cultural empowerment.

She does not say this as ideology. She says it is arithmetic. Making movies is expensive, and public policies that support the sector are essential for Brazil to sustain its cinematic voice. Without them, the market does what markets do. It favors the already-dominant, risking cultural sovereignty.

This is where the recent political history comes in, and it is not subtle in the notes. Magalhães frames the current moment in Brazilian cinema as a response, even a resistance strategy, to a period of institutional paralysis under former president Jair Bolsonaro. She calls that period very bad for national culture and says the cultural sector was harmed, emphasizing the political stakes involved.

She points to concrete actions: Bolsonaro publicly supported closing Ancine and cutting the budget of the Audiovisual Sector Fund, which she describes as the main engine of Brazilian audiovisual activity.

“Without a doubt, I think that scare the right gave us with Bolsonaro caused, on one hand, repression in production, but it also made us feel again a great need to speak,” she told EFE.

It is a striking formulation. Fear compresses. Fear also concentrates. The notes suggest that after a period when the state signaled hostility toward culture, artists and institutions began to treat expression not as a luxury but as a necessity.

Magalhães goes further and claims Brazilian cinema is living a moment comparable only to Cinema Novo, the politically committed movement born in the late 1950s associated with figures like Glauber Rocha and Cacá Diegues. The comparison matters because it places today’s success in a tradition of cinema that is not shy about politics, not shy about critique, not shy about Brazil as a complicated character.

And that loops back to the film itself—a story set in 1977. Brazil is portrayed as a character. Strangeness held up as a value. The applause is loud. The policy stakes are louder if you listen.

The wager here is whether Brazil can keep financing a cinema that speaks in its own voice, at its own scale, without returning to another freeze. A second year in the global spotlight feels like momentum. But momentum, in film, is never only art. It is also the money, the institutions, and the decision to treat culture as something a country actively protects.

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