The girl does not ride the horse in any conventional sense. Instead, she engages in a series of intimate, tactile rituals: she strokes its flanks, presses her body against its warmth, whispers (inaudibly) into its ear. She grooms it obsessively, braiding its mane with wildflowers. The horse, for its part, is depicted as a creature of immense patience and latent power—sometimes docile, other times skittish.
In the end, the horse and the girl remain locked in their silent dance—a haunting, beautiful, and profoundly unsettling image of innocence wrestling with a body it does not yet understand. For those who seek cinema that disturbs the sleep of the comfortable, A Menina e o Cavalo remains an essential, if nearly unwatchable, masterpiece. A Menina E O Cavalo 1983
Nevertheless, modern audiences often recoil. The film has rarely been screened publicly in Brazil since the 1990s and is more frequently discussed in academic texts on transgressive cinema than viewed. It exists in a gray zone—alongside works like Nagisa Ōshima’s In the Realm of the Senses (1976) or Catherine Breillat’s Fat Girl (2001)—that demand a conversation about where art ends and violation begins. Visually, Capovilla employs a stark, sun-drenched palette. Cinematographer Dib Lutfi shoots in long, unbroken takes, often from a low angle that elevates the horse to monumental proportions. The girl is frequently framed in extreme close-up—her hands, her bare feet, the back of her neck—while the horse is shown whole. This creates a jarring power dynamic: the human is fragmented, the animal is whole. The editing is glacial, forcing the viewer to sit with each gesture until comfort dissolves into unease. The girl does not ride the horse in any conventional sense
In the landscape of Brazilian experimental cinema, few works possess the unsettling, dreamlike power of "A Menina e o Cavalo" (The Girl and the Horse), a 1983 short film directed by the enigmatic Maurice Capovilla . Clocking in at just under 20 minutes, the film is a minimalist, dialogue-free fable that defies easy categorization. It is at once a pastoral idyll, a psychosexual exploration, and a raw, almost anthropological study of the boundary between the human and the animal. Decades after its release, the film retains its power to disturb, fascinate, and provoke, largely due to its unflinching central metaphor and its radical treatment of a child actor in a deeply symbolic role. Context: Brazilian Cinema in Transition To understand A Menina e o Cavalo , one must place it within the broader context of early 1980s Brazilian cinema. The military dictatorship (1964–1985) was in its twilight years, but censorship remained a shadow over the arts. The exuberant, politically engaged Cinema Novo movement of the 1960s and 70s—led by figures like Glauber Rocha and Nelson Pereira dos Santos—had fragmented. In its place emerged a more introspective, allegorical, and often darker cinema. Filmmakers turned inward, using surrealism, myth, and the body as sites of resistance. Capovilla, an Italian-Brazilian director known for his daring adaptations (e.g., O Jogo da Vida ), was a perfect fit for this moment. A Menina e o Cavalo can be seen as a radical distillation of this turn: a film that says everything by showing what is barely permissible. Plot: A Wordless Ritual The film’s narrative is deceptively simple, almost ritualistic. A pre-adolescent girl (played by the then 11-year-old actress Cristina Achcar ) lives alone or is isolated in a vast, sun-bleached, rural landscape—a sparse farm or a wild pampas. There are no adults, no dialogue, no explanatory context. Her only companion is a large, powerful, dark-coated horse. The film follows their strange, repetitive days. The horse, for its part, is depicted as
The film’s most controversial and unforgettable sequence occurs when the girl, in a moment of solitary exploration, begins to mimic sexual acts with the horse. She rubs herself against its leg, clutches its torso, and eventually positions herself beneath the animal in a simulation of coitus. The horse, crucially, does not respond aggressively or sexually; it stands bewildered, a monumental presence bearing witness to a human child’s precocious, unguided exploration of desire. The camera holds these shots with a disquieting, anthropological stillness. There is no music to guide emotion—only the sounds of wind, breathing, and the occasional snort of the horse.
Sound design is equally radical. There is no score. The natural sounds—wind rustling dry grass, the heavy breath of the horse, the soft friction of skin against hide—are amplified to near-ASMR intensity, making the viewer feel like a voyeur hiding in the bushes. A Menina e o Cavalo is not a film for easy consumption. It is a cinematic Rorschach test: some will see a tender, tragic poem about solitude and the animal self; others will see a deeply troubling document of a child placed in an untenable symbolic position. What is undeniable is its power. Capovilla created a work that burrows under the skin, raising uncomfortable questions about the nature of desire, the limits of childhood, and the ways cinema can (or should) depict the forbidden.