3 MAR 2025

Brazil's Globoplay film "I'm Still Here" won an Oscar as "best international film"

This is the first time a Brazilian production is awarded with an Oscar statuette. The film previously won the Goya for best Ibero-American film and was nominated for a Golden Globe and a British BAFTA award.

3 MAR 2025

Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp

The first Globoplay Original film “I'm Still Here” (“Ainda Estou Aqui”), by filmmaker Walter Salles, won an Oscar for Best International Feature Film at the 97th edition of the Academy awards held at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. This historic milestone marks a turning point for Brazilian cinema and Globo itself, which, for the first time, has a production recognized with an Oscar statuette. 

"How symbolic it is to receive our first Oscar and so many other major awards in the year we celebrate Globo’s 100th anniversary. "I'm Still Here" is a film brilliantly told and executed, with outstanding performances that earned this beautiful rise. Investing in, enabling, and showcasing Brazilian talent has been Globo’s mission for so many years, and seeing this talent recognized among the best in the world is a source of great pride. This victory is for our cinema and for all of us, Brazilians!", celebrates Manuel Belmar, Director of Finance, Legal, Infrastructure and Digital Products at Globo. 

"I'm Still Here" has won awards at more than 30 national and international festivals and attracted massive audiences in Brazilian theaters, with over 5 million viewers. A Brazil-France co-production, the cast features Fernanda Torres, Selton Mello, Fernanda Montenegro, Marjorie Estiano, Antônio Saboia, Maeve Jinkings, Humberto Carrão, and Dan Stulbach, among other talented actors. The film is produced by VideoFilmes, RT Features, and Mact Productions, in co-production with Globoplay, ARTE France, and Conspiração, with Brazilian distribution by Sony Pictures. 

For her role in the film, Torres won the Golden Globe for best actress in a drama film.

The film is set in Rio de Janeiro in the early 1970s, during the military dictatorship. The Paivas family, the protagonist of the story, is the victim of an act of arbitrary violence that changes their lives and forces mother Eunice to reinvent herself.