Brazil 1944_PARENTE
- Movie: Brazil
- Detected quality: 720p
- IMDb link: 0036670
- IMDb rating: 5.9 (239 votes) Search
- Genres: Comedy, Romance, Musical
- Director: Joseph Santley
- Cast: Edward Everett Horton, Virginia Bruce, Robert Livingston, Tito GuΓzar and others
- Release date: 30 Nov 1944
- Release year: 1944
- Runtime: 91 minutes
- Country: United States
- Keywords: camp, campy, song, songwriter, brazilian, homosexual, romantic rivalry, gay, pursuit, uncle nephew relationship
American writer Nicky Henderson travels to Rio de Janeiro to spend two weeks researching a new book on Brazil. When the local reporters discover that Nicky is the author of the unflattering Why Marry a Latin? , they treat her coldly, but she is happily greeted by Rod Walker, a diplomat and former boyfriend. Rod, who still loves Nicky, takes her to a nightclub and introduces her to famed dancers Veloz and Yolanda, but Nicky is more interested in exploring the "real" Brazil. The next day, Nicky goes to a travel agency owned by Everett St. John Everett and there meets Miguel Soares. Miguel, who is the renowned composer of the hit song "Brazil," pretends to be a tour guide when he mistakenly assumes that Nicky is a writer of travel books. After he makes a date with Nicky for sightseeing that afternoon, Miguel rhapsodizes about her beauty to Everett, who chastises him for taking time away from composing. Everett has cause to worry, as the rights to Miguel's next song, which is to have its premiere in two weeks at Carnival, have been sold to American music publisher Edward Graham. Graham has been nagging Everett about Miguel's tardiness, but Miguel assures his friend that he will be able to work once he is inspired by Nicky. Miguel takes Nicky to see many interesting sights, and although she longs to continue her tour, Rod insists that she accompany him to the lush ranch of his friend, Senor Machada. Miguel is saddened that Nicky is leaving Rio, but his attitude changes when Everett informs him that she is not a simple travel writer. Upon learning that Nicky is the author of Why Marry a Latin? , Miguel vows to make her fall in love with him and then break her heart. Hoping to get Miguel out of town, as the impatient Graham is due to arrive soon, Everett suggests that Miguel also go to Machada's ranch. Once he is at the ranch, Miguel convinces Machada, an old family friend, to pretend that Miguel speaks only Portuguese. When the astonished Nicky assumes that the non-comprehending Miguel is her tour guide, Machada explains that this Miguel, the famous composer, is the twin brother of her tour guide, and that all of the children in their family are named Miguel. Nicky quickly falls in love with the romantic, singing Miguel, but when they return to Rio, Everett again scolds Miguel for spending time pursuing Nicky instead of writing his song. Miguel, whose current melody comes from a tune that Nicky frequently hums, must again leave town when Graham arrives and demands the song. Miguel arranges for his uncle, Renato Da Silva, to take Nicky and him to his coffee plantation, but Nicky inadvertently complicates his plans by inviting Graham. Accompanied by Everett, Miguel tries to stall Graham while continuing to romance Nicky. Unknown to Everett, Miguel sincerely loves Nicky and is thrilled when she accepts his proposal of marriage. One morning, Everett, afraid that Nicky is going to be hurt by Miguel's duplicity, tells her that there is only Miguel the composer, who is toying with her affections out of revenge for her book. Heartbroken, Nicky returns to Rio, and the lonely Miguel finishes his song. Stranded in Rio due to wartime travel restrictions, Nicky attends the Carnival with Rod, and despite her dismay at hearing Miguel's song played everywhere, she enjoys a performance by visiting American movie star Roy Rogers. Miguel takes little pleasure in having won the grand prize for songwriting, but his spirits soar once more when Everett finds Nicky and brings her to the nightclub where Miguel is singing. The happy couple then reconcile as everyone sings Miguel's composition.
Torrent Contents Size: 1.43 GB
| Brazil 1944.Pt.BR.srt |
SRT
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100.68 KB
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| Brazil 1944.mp4 |
MP4
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1.43 GB
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| Brazil 1944Eng.srt |
SRT
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109.64 KB
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Location
Trackers
| Tracker name |
|---|
| udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969/announce |
| udp://9.rarbg.me:2850/announce |
| udp://9.rarbg.to:2920/announce |
| udp://tracker.opentrackr.org:1337 |
| udp://tracker.leechers-paradise.org:6969/announce |
Torrent hash:
Media Information
ⓘ Description
Feb 27, 2026
General
Format:
MP4
File Size:
1.43 GB
Duration:
01:31:00
Overall Bit Rate:
2.2 MbpsOverall Bit RateTotal data per second for the entire file — video, audio, and subtitles combined.
Video Streams
Video Stream 1
H.264
720p
Resolution:
976 x 720 (720p/HD)
Codec:
H.264 (AVC)Video CodecThe compression method used for the video. Newer codecs keep the same quality with smaller files.
MPEG-2→H.264→HEVC→AV1
OlderMore efficient →
Bit Rate:
2.1 MbpsVideo Bit RateThe amount of data used per second for the video. Higher generally means better picture quality, but also a larger file.
Frame Rate:
23.976 fpsFrame RateHow many images are shown per second to create the illusion of motion.
24 fps — Cinema standard (filmic look)
30 fps — Common for TV shows
60 fps — Smooth motion (sports, gaming)
Aspect Ratio:
1.37:1 AcademyAspect RatioThe shape of the video frame. Wider ratios give a more cinematic look but may show black bars on a standard screen.
16:9
4:3
Black bars on the sides on a 16:9 screen
4:3
16:9
1.85:1
2:1
2.39:1
Pixel Format:
4:2:0 8-bitPixel Format4:2:0 — Standard color storage. Looks identical to full color for virtually all content.
8-bit — Standard color depth with 16.7 million colors.
8-bit — Standard color depth with 16.7 million colors.
Audio Streams
Audio Stream 1
AAC
2.0
ENG
Channels:
StereoAudio ChannelsStereo — left and right channels. The standard for most music and casual viewing.
LR👤
Codec:
AACAudio FormatThe compression method for audio. Lossless codecs preserve the original studio quality perfectly.
Lossy (smaller files)MP2MP3AACVorbisOpusDDDD+DTS
Lossless (studio quality)FLACDTS-HD MATrueHDPCM
Sample Rate:
48 kHzSample RateHow many audio snapshots per second. 48 kHz is the video standard — more than enough for the full range of human hearing.
Bit Rate:
158 kbpsAudio Bit RateData per second for the audio. Higher means better quality for lossy codecs. Lossless audio always preserves full quality regardless of bitrate.
