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Hello, I am looking for someone to write an article on The Message of Redemption in Central Station. It needs to be at least 500 words.
Hello, I am looking for someone to write an article on The Message of Redemption in Central Station. It needs to be at least 500 words. She sees the hard world around her, of crime, death, and filth that many people live in. When she writes a letter for one woman with a 9-year-old child, Josue, she thinks little of it. But the mother is killed and little Josue hangs out around the train station. She knows he will get into trouble, perhaps even be shot for shoplifting, as is the custom in the crime-ridden Rio Central Station. Her better instincts win her over and she takes the boy home and sells ho to an adoption agency to make some money. When she realizes that the boy is probably too old to be adopted and many agencies sell such children to the black market for organ harvesting and other devastating things, she decides to steal the child back and takes him in. They then try to locate Josue’s father for reunification. As they go on this journey, her rough exterior melts as she and Josue develop a relationship. She eventually develops the capacity to love, and her maternal instincts take over, as she loves and cares for the boy, as he does for her, as a maternal replacement.
I liked the movie a lot because it has a message of redemption. Although she has a hardened heart throughout much of the movie, we see the true soul and motherly instincts of Dora, as she and Josue develop a bond as strong as any mother and child. This transformation does not happen quickly, as Dora even tries to abandon Jasue at a bus station as they embark on their quest to find his father. But they stay together and become closer and closer as this journey unfolds.
The grittiness of the many places they go to is quite interesting and lends an air of authenticity to the movie. Although I thought Josue (Vinicius de Oliveira) was cast as to Hollywood “cute,” and not enough of a real Brazilian street urchin, Dora’s portrayal by Fernanda Montenegro is authentic and moving. It is a plot of the motherless/fatherless child meets older originally-spurning, then ultimately loving adult, but the twists with the many adventures, the slow development of Dora’s character, and the ultimate love they have for each other was moving. The avoidance of “and they lived happily-ever-after” ending was interesting, as the two are finally split up and Dora leaves, and we are left to wonder if things will really be all right for Josue in this huge housing complex.
The movie contains a lot of human sensibilities, is gritty and humane, and develops that relationship and friendship between Dora and Josue in a tender and loving way, although we are given the flaws of Dora throughout the movie. In the end, though, she realizes once again her redemptive capacity to love and care for someone, and her life is changed forever, and so is Joshua's, we hope. .