
Júlio Eduardo Bressane de Azevedo (Rio de Janeiro, February 13, 1946 ) is a Brazilian filmmaker and writer.
A representative of the Brazilian Cinema Marginal, he began making films as an assistant director of Walter Lima Jr., in 1965. In 1967, Bressane debuted as director with Face to Face, being selected for the Festival of Brasilia. In 1970, he founded Belair Movies in company with fellow filmmaker Rogério Sganzerla. They chose a model of making films and low-cost production and thereby managed to run six feature films in just six months.
He came into exile in London in the early 1970s, but returned to Brazil several years later and made one film after another, using slapstick and debauchery as its main features. An acclaimed film of this period was the provocative Tabu, released in 1982. Critics consider Bressane the most scholarly of the Brazilian film directors, and his work is notable for the diversity of its narrative language. Another feature of his filmography is the comprehensive approach to historical and literary characters. He is also noted by his low-budget, short-time shootings, with an average of 11 to 14 days to make and edit a film.
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Tabu
1983 · as Self

Dunas do Barato
2017 · as Self (archive footage)

The Agony
1976

Dark Galaxy
1993 · as Self

Il vento del cinema

Galáxia Albina
1992

Sentimental Education
2013 · as Self

About Cinema
2015 · as Self

Earth
2015

Talking Cinema
1986

Chinese Viola
1975 · as Self

Phantom of the Opera
2026 · as Self

Drumming Beat of the Stars
2012

Candango: Memoirs from a Festival
2020 · as Self

Belair
2009

Nietzsche em Português
2023 · as Self

The Long Voyage of the Yellow Bus
2023 · as Self

A Miss e o Dinossauro
2005 · as Himself (archive footage)