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| Four Days in September : ウィキペディア英語版 | Four Days in September
''Four Days in September'' ((ポルトガル語:O Que É Isso, Companheiro?)) is a 1997 Brazilian thriller film directed by Bruno Barreto and produced by his parents Lucy and Luiz Carlos Barreto. It is a fictional version of the 1969 kidnapping of the United States Ambassador to Brazil, Charles Burke Elbrick, by members of Revolutionary Movement 8th October (MR-8) and Ação Libertadora Nacional (ALN). It was nominated as Best Foreign Language Film at the 1998 Academy Awards. ==Background== The film is "loosely based" on the 1979 memoir ''O Que É Isso Companheiro?'' (in English: ''What's This, Comrade?''), written by politician Fernando Gabeira.〔 In 1969, as a member of Revolutionary Movement 8th October (MR-8), a student guerrilla group, he participated in the abduction of the United States ambassador to Brazil, negotiating to gain release of leftist political prisoners. MR-8 was protesting the recent takeover of Brazil by a military government and seeking the release of political prisoners. But, the military increased its repression of dissent, MR-8 and ALN members were tortured by the police, and democracy was not re-established in Brazil until 1989.〔 Gabeira later became a journalist and politician, elected as congressman from the Green Party and Dilma Roussef, who also took part in the plot, became President of Brazil.
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