Emerging Nations: Complicated Relationships
Ilha das flores (1980) or The Isle of Flowers is the name of a dump in Belém Novo, Porto Alegre in Southern Brazil and is the subject of a 1989 Brazilian short film by Jorge Furtado. With the help of an omniscient narrator and a collection of bizarre images, Furtado traces the path of a tomato from garden, to supermarket, to home, to trashcan, to dump. By employing a satiric storytelling mode, Furtado explains how waste and landfills affect the poorest members of society. He illustrates this point by showing how often times animals (in this instance, pigs) are treated more humanely than people. Because these impoverished people are “free” and have no owners (as opposed to the pigs in the film), no one advocates for their rights. Their voices are lost and they are relegated to sift through trash deemed unfit for animal consumption.
Furtado directly points to the shortcomings in a system that ignores the needs of its poorest members. The reason Furtado gives for the inhuman treatment of women and children is poverty. Watching women and children sort through mounds of filth at the dump in order to find sustenance in Furtado’s film is a stark contrast from the technicians and engineers we see interacting with trash at U.S. landfills.