Critic José Geraldo Couto stated that
Kenoma,
Eliane Caffé's first feature film, is, from every point of view, an eccentric film in the landscape of Brazilian cinema, firstly for its premise about the quest for the utopia of perpetual motion, and secondly for its setting in a village lost in time in the
Jequitinhonha Valley. This choice of an archaic theme gives the film a "tone of a biblical parable," whose tension is based on the confrontation between "the pole of utopia and the pole of pragmatism." For the critic,
Kenoma is "a poetic manifesto" that takes the side of dreams and creative daring. Despite pointing out screenplay issues, such as the story being driven by an outsider character and the characterization of certain roles, Couto emphasizes that nothing undermines the film's impact, which has "two irresistible trump cards: the exceptional verisimilitude given to Lineu's machine and the poignant performance of José Dumont."
Accolades ==References==