The Blue Trail
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In a near future eerily similar to our own, Gabriel Mascaro’s The Blue Trail (O Último Azul) follows the 77-year-old Tereza (Denise Weinberg) on a late-in-life hero’s journey, defying the expectations of age and society. With a strong body and sharp mind, she embarks on a quest to fulfil her lifelong wish of flying in a plane, now that the retirement age has been lowered from 80 and she is expected to relocate immediately to The Colony – a nebulous, far-off place from which no one returns.
Mascaro crafts a vision of bureaucracy and quiet social control reminiscent of Metropolis, but where Lang’s dystopia is built on stark binaries – workers below, elites above – The Blue Trail presents something more insidious. A government official pins laurel leaves to Tereza’s front door as an ostensibly celebratory gesture that marks her impending displacement. The Colony is rarely mentioned and never seen, but its ominous presence is hinted at through neon graffiti scrawled in the slums pleading “give me back my grandpa”. There are no underground labourers and no single villain orchestrating oppression in the film’s reality; instead, the system functions through the steady erosion of autonomy.
Visually, The Blue Trail takes the opposite route than bleak, cyberpunk dystopias. Guilherme Garza’s cinematography casts Tereza’s journey with the roguish, big-hearted Cadu (Rodrigo Santoro) and her fellow rebel Roberta (Miriam Socarrás) across northern Brazil’s breathtaking rainforests in a mythical light, with endless waves of the Amazon River, abandoned ritualistic sculptures that litter the forest, and fluorescent blue snails whose slime induces psychedelic revelations.
Together, they forge their own path – laughing, resisting, living – not as fugitives, but as seekers and discoverers of something more profound: the fundamental right to shape their own existence. And that’s what takes The Blue Trail from good to great – its celebration of possibility, of freedom not as an abstract ideal but as something deeply felt, deeply lived. Though the world Mascaro paints is quietly terrifying, it pulses with life, reminding us that even in the darkest times, resistance is not just necessary, it is the essence of being human.
Christina Yang
The Blue Trail (O Último Azul) does not have a release date yet.
Read more reviews from our Berlin Film Festival coverage here.
For further information about the event visit the Berlin Film Festival website here.
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