
Personal project: NGO Dream!
Can't #StayHome
But if they had one,
that's what they would do.
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To protest against quarantine breakers,
we brought in those who don't have the same privilege to deliver the message: the homeless.
A personal social project my friends and I did in just one week, due the urgence of the cause.
During COVID-19, a conservative movement in Brazil rose against quarantine, with people refusing to stay indoors. On the other hand, others would have given anything to obey it: the homeless.
We launched an instagram called @cantStayHome,
where homeless people opined against quarantine breakers, with provocative signs and real testimonies,
as unlike them, they had that option to stay at home.
In the end, we made headlines in major newspapers across the country and increased donations at NGO Sonhe, and even became trending topics on social media at hashtag #StayAtHome.
“For some, staying locked up at home is hell. For others, it’s paradise.”
“Can’t stand being with your family in quarantine anymore? Try with none.”
“40 days of social isolation doesn't kill anyone: I've been going through this for years and I'm still alive.”
“If you're sick of watching medical series on Netflix, you really wouldn’t want to live one.”
“While you dream of going to the streets, my dream is to get out of it.”
I'm proud to say that, in the end, we made it: headlines in major newspapers across the country, increased donations at NGO Dream!, and even trending topics on social media at hashtag #StayAtHome, all from a personal desire by three friends, who wanted to make a difference during the pandemic, in just 1 week.
“Explain to me, how is lying
on a soft mattress so tough?”

When you Wish Upon a Star
Not every wish is meant to come true.
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When You Wish a Star was a unpretentious and fun short-animation tale.
The story reveals how children perceive the world, far from the naive simplicity as adults often imagine.
Shown at Anima Mundi, the second largest international animation festival in the world and the largest in Latin America.

Um Sopro
A clip about abuse survivors
rewriting their scars with tattoos.
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For brazilian heavy metal band Pad, we released a short film in the form of a music video that tells the story of women marked by violence on their skin.
The tattoo artist covered his marks of aggression with new marks: tattoos about empowerment and self-love, showing that it's always possible to remark a pain into something beautiful.
A personal project that won more than 20 international film awards and an interview on "The Noite", the talk show with the second largest audience in Brazil.