Thanks to the Riotur.Rio team of photographers, a quick and colourful look at the first of two nights of parades of Rio’s top samba school. Last night it was the turn of Imperatriz, Mangueira, Salgueiro, São Clemente, Viradouro and Beija-Flor.

Thanks to the Riotur.Rio team of photographers, a quick and colourful look at the first of two nights of parades of Rio’s top samba school. Last night it was the turn of Imperatriz, Mangueira, Salgueiro, São Clemente, Viradouro and Beija-Flor.

On Sunday, 27 February “Rio: The Guide” sent a postcard from Rio de Janeiro to the Sunday Times. Read here.
The League of Samba Schools (LIESA ) has launched a new logo to be used at Rio’s carnival, and during the parades that will now take place on 22 and 23 April.
“Rio Carnaval” is imagined to reflect the movement of the “porta-bandeira”, the school’s standard-bearer, from above. It is the work of one of Brazil’s leading design agencies, Tátil Design, that was involved in developing the logo marks for the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Better to be safe than sorry, so despite the fact that Omicron may be on the decline in Brazil by the end of February, when carnival should take place, the sensible decision has been taken to delay the main carnival parades in both Rio and São Paulo until the Tiradentes holiday weekend in April.
So the main parades in Rio will now take place on Friday, 22 April and Saturday, 23 April and all tickets purchased for February will be valid.
The move to April may be good for international visitors as few will have booked for February given the global uncertainty with the pandemic.
Imperatriz, Mangueira, Salgueiro, São Clemente, Viradouro and Beija-Flor will parade on the first night with Paraíso do Tuiuti, Portela, Mocidade, Tijuca, Grande Rio and Vila Isabel going on the second night.
The awards for the 23rd Festival do Rio were announced and presented during a ceremony at Sala 1 of Estação NET Botafogo on Sunday, 19 December 2021.
Première Brasil – Redentor Trophy – 2021
Jury: Patrícia Andrade (president), Bia Salgado, Gustavo Pizzi, Quito Ribeiro and Suzana Pires
Best Fiction Feature: Medusa, by Anita Rocha da Silveira
Best Documentary: Rolê – Histórias dos rolezinhos, by Vladimir Seixas
Best Short: Solitude, by Tami Martins and Aron Miranda
Special Jury Prize: Medida provisória, by Lázaro Ramos
Best Director – Feature Fiction: Anita Rocha da Silveira, for Medusa; and Laís Bodanzky, for A viagem de Pedro
Best Director – Documentary: Murilo Salles, for Uma baía
Best Actress: Tati Villela, for Mundo novo
Best Actor: Rômulo Braga, for Sol
Best Supporting Actress: Lara Tremouroux, for Medusa
Best Supporting Actor: Sergio Laurentino, for A viagem de Pedro
Best Screenwriting: Alvaro Campos and cast, for Mundo novo
Best Editing: Eva Randolph, for Uma baía
Best Cinematography: Ivo Lopes Araújo, for Casa vazia
Première Brasil – New Directions (Novos Rumos) 2021
Jury: Emílio Domingos (president), Alice Furtado and Mariana Genescá
Best Film: Rio Doce, by Fellipe Fernandes
Special Jury Prize: for actress Renata Carvalho, for Os primeiros soldados
Special Jury Prize (Honorary Mention): O dia da posse, by Allan Ribeiro
Best Short: Chão de fábrica, by Nina Kopko
As Rio de Janeiro emerges from the global pandemic, 9 December 2021, saw the return of its premiere annual film event with the opening of the 23rd Festival do Rio, Rio International Film Festival with the Brazilian premiere of Pedro Almodóvar’s Parallel Mothers. Festival do Rio returns this year with the full support of the Mayor and city of Rio de Janeiro, as well as live audiences
“Our mission,” the Mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Eduardo Paes, explains “is to re-build Rio’s role in the audiovisual sector and strengthen the sector with investment, which we have already started to do. Rio as a city depends a lot on culture, as it helps to build the history and identity of our city and our people. Festival do Rio is one of the pillars of our renaissance on both the national and world stage.”
From 9 to 19 December 2021 the cinema going public in Rio de Janeiro has the opportunity to see both international and domestic Brazilian films. They include award-winners, some of the years most talked about and commented on productions, and rarities from the archives. The public also get to participate in debates, special sessions and lectures.
Navigating its way back after an absent year, this year’s edition is a compact one, with 25 centre-pieces with sights on returning to a full-length edition in 2022 and new banner sponsors.
Première Brasil remains one of the most anticipated and popular sections of the festival, and the main competitive section that offers an important shop window for Brazilian cinema both internationally and domestically. Première Brasil also gives the audiences in Rio the chance to see the films and then meet and talk with the filmmakers and actors. The public also votes for the best film in the categories of fiction, documentary and short, while an official jury awards the festival’s Redentor trophy across a diverse range of categories from the films in official competition. In total 71 Brazilian films drawn from features and shorts will screen across Rio in the Première Brasil section during the festival
“This year’s selection,” says festival director Ilda Santiago,”shows a strong Brazilian cinema, full of reflection which, despite far from ideal conditions, is ready to reclaim its place with the cinema going public.”
Among international highlights this year are Joe Wright’s Cyrano and Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast, both of which are receiving their Brazilian premieres. Also screening are this year’s Palme d’Or winner, Julia Ducournau’s Titane; along with Céline Sciamma’s Petite Maman; Radu Jude’s winner of Berlin’s Golden Bear, Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn; Apichatpong Weerasethakul Memoria; Paul Verhoeven’s Benedetta; Andrea Arnold’s Cow; Nanni Moretti’s Three Floors; and Woody Allen’s most recent offering, Rifkin’s Festival, that premiered during the recent San Sebastian Film Festival.
Brazilian directors with films screening during Festival do Rio include Júlio Bressane, Karim Aïnouz, Bruno Barreto, Luiz Carlos Lacerda, Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas, Luiz Carlos Lacerda, Murilo Salles, Laís Bodanzky, and many others.
The work of Hong Kong director Wong Kar Wai will be in the spotlight with the screening of five of the director’s most acclaimed films that have been restored by the director in partnership with MUBI. The festival also celebrates the 70th anniversary of the French film magazine “Cahiers du Cinéma” with the screening of some classic French works from Louis Malle, Robert Bresson, Chris Marker, Eric Rohmer, René Laloux, Jacques Rivette, Jean-Luc Godard and Costa-Gavras, as well as an exhibition of the magazine.
As Latin America gets back to some form of normality, we have the list of what are considered to be the 100 best restaurants in Latin America “past and present”.
Due to the pandemic the organisers decided to come up with a retrospective list, which spans 12 countries and was created by aggregating the votes from all previous editions, all the way down to No.1, being crowned The Greatest Restaurant in Latin America 2013-2021. The top ten are:
Brazil has 17 restaurants listed in the Top 100 and they are:
The short video counts them down:
With a 1×0 win over Colombia on 11 November 2021, Brazil mathematically guaranteed its place at the FIFA World Cup in Qatar in December 2022, and in doing so remains the only country to qualify for every single one of the 22 World Cup Finals, winning five of them.
After the finals in Russia in 2018, Brazil is tied with Germany in playing 109 games in the finals, but has won 73 games compared to Germany’s 67. Brazil has also scored 229 goals in finals, compared to Germany’s 226.
Follow the World Cup at www.worldcuptheguide.com

São Paulo is a city that rightly prides itself on its gastronomic excellence, offering not only the best of Brazilian cuisine, especially the barbecue houses, but also a truly eclectic mix of restaurants serving dishes from the four corners of the globe. For many food critics, São Paulo now boasts the best selection of top restaurants in the world.
For that reason alone you will want to know what are the picks from Veja São Paulo’s restaurant guide “Comer & Beber”, which like Veja Rio is celebrating its 25th edition. Not exactly the same categories as Rio, but Veja’s best in São Paulo for 2021 are (and see if you agree):
In 1997 Veja Rio launched its excellent restaurant and bar guide “Comer & Beber”, which also chooses its best restaurants and bars in Rio for the year (it does the same for São Paulo). The list of the city’s best for Rio 2021 are: