About Walter Salles: Walter Moreira Salles, Jr. is a Brazilian filmmaker and film producer of international prominence.
Also, I knew that the impact of Motorcycle Diaries was going to be so resonant for all of us who went through the experience of making it that I didn't want to do anything that could reflect it.
The films that I've done before were original stories most of the time, I did two adaptations before this, but they were mostly original stories where I had complete freedom to evolve in the direction I wanted.
The necessity to conceptualise has to come very early on, and defining a vector of development for that film also at the beginning of the process will allow you much more freedom as you go along.
My father was a diplomat for part of his life and I jumped from country to country and culture to culture.
A filmmaker can never be distant from his roots.
Also, there are now new laws in Brazil which create incentives for Argentine and Latin American films to be premiered and distributed in Brazil and vice versa.
And my generation in Brazil was influenced by Cinema Novo. So we're echoing what's been done way in the past.
But I also think that the more you reason collectively about what the project should be at the beginning of the process, the more you can improvise later.
I come from a country and also a continent whose identity is in the making. We're a very young culture, and I think that things are not yet crystallised.
I come from Brazil, which is a Portuguese speaking part of the continent.
I did documentaries for maybe 10 years before I turned to fiction films.
I went to Cuba maybe eight or nine times.
I'm much more interested in living specific experiences in films.
It was a complex endeavor so without Robert Redford's constant support we wouldn't have gotten to the end.
No, I worked a lot for European television, doing documentaries in Brazil.
On the contrary, I'm a strong believer in the necessity of imperfection coming into the film.
So I feel a responsibility to help first-time film-makers in Brazil, but also to increase the dialogue between film cultures which are really wonderful and so much closer to us than what we do see on our screens.
So the search for a father in Central Station is also a search for a country.
So when I was very young, I longed for Brazil.
That's why I have always admired documentaries, because they open windows that can make you understand much better where you come from, much better than fiction, I think.