Bruno Jorge’s quietly observed film has an added poignance as the leader of the expedition to immunise one of Brazil’s isolated tribes is murdered activist Bruno Pereira

‘It doesn’t hurt to get your image,” says one man to another, nodding towards the camera. Both men are Korubo, an Indigenous tribe that lives deep in the Amazon rainforest. The man hesitant about being filmed has never seen a camera before. He belongs to an “uncontacted” group, who have lived completely isolated from the outside world – until now. This first contact is documented by film-maker Bruno Jorge in his fascinating, occasionally frustrating film – two-and-a-half hours of observation with no added frills. No interviews, no context, no explainers.

Jorge follows a 2019 expedition organised by Funai, Brazil’s agency for Indigenous people, which as a rule has a no-contact policy with isolated tribes. This expedition is necessary to immunise the uncontacted group of Korubo and to reunite them with family members who were separated during a conflict in 2015 with a neighbouring tribe. The moment of contact is extraordinary. Korubo guide Txitxopi, who is part of the expedition team, hasn’t seen his brother since the conflict. They hunch down chanting, stroking each other’s heads. Little boys stand around to watch, some of them with pet baby monkeys wrapped around their necks like scarves. I couldn’t take my eyes off it all.

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