4º – Rain Man (Barry Levinson, 1988)A young man discovers that his father had left all his fortune to an unknown brother. The film gains its substance by showing the new relationship between this young man and his brother, a middle-aged man with autism. Raising a positive aura for its unleashing of scenes, the film is light and dynamic while showing the process of rediscovering a man. A great film, getting even better with the masterful performance of actor Dustin Hoffman.
3º – Groundhog Day (Harold Ramis, 1993)A reporter sees himself again charged with the task of covering an annual event he despises in a small town. There, the man, inexplicably, will have to relive the same day endlessly until he discovers the real meaning of his life. Exposing Nietzsche’s concept of ‘eternal return’, the film ponders a love for the present, the now. One of the greatest comedies ever made in the cinema, transposing the common senses of the genre, giving the viewer a unique experience.
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