terça-feira, 19 de agosto de 2008

Rio and Niterói

My teacher and friend João Luiz sent me some pictures that were made by one of his friends and I have decided to put two of them in my blog. In the first one, you can see the Guanabara bay, with the Rio-Niterói bridge, that links my city, Niterói, with Rio de Janeiro. The bridge has 13 km lenght and it was built in 1975. You can also see Flamengo beach.


In this other picture you can see some beaches from Niterói, specially Icaraí, that is is also the name of this neighbourhood where I live. You somebody someday have any chance, opportunity or desire of coming to Brazil, contact me!

Charles Rennie Mackintosh


Before going to Scotland, I had never heard the name of Charles Rennie Mackintosh. He was a famous Scottish painter, architecture, painter and designer who lived from 1868 to 1928. I went to Glasgow, Scotland’s capital, twice, the first time was last year, and the second just after I arrived Toronto. I went there because of an academic event called Screen Seminar, which was held in the University of Toronto. Mackintosh was born in Glasgow and there there’re many of his works. I could finally know his work and I was fascinated with it. His paintings were influenced by Japanese art and when you see his work you actually realized how ahead of his time he was. You can see his influence, for example, in famous Klimt’s works or even in modernists like Kadinski or Miró. Mackintosh’s famous roses were also art décor avant la letter and still today they look so beautiful. This last time I went to Glasgow I had the opportunity of going to Mackintosh museum, where they recreated the house where he lived. That’s amazing! It’s a pity that we were not allowed to take pictures, because it’s so beautiful. Mackintosh and his wife did all the furniture and decoration of the house and everything combines in such a gracious way. The dinner room’s wall, tables and chairs are all black or dark-brown, and the place looks very comfortable and austere. But when you go upstairs you are chocked with the bedroom that is all white and bright, like you have arrived in heaven. You cannot know how it is just looking at pictures, you must be there, because you can see the light coming from the windows and the effect that it has over the place. Well, there are many other things in Mackintosh’s work that are also very interesting, like his chairs, at the same time symmetrical and unbalanced, and the types that he used to write his name and the name of his works. If you are interested, in Toronto you have a great opportunity to know Mackintosh’s work. If you go to the Royal Ontario Museum, in the third floor where there’s a exhibition about European art, you are going to find a Mackintosh room, which can show a little part of the work of this great artist.

segunda-feira, 18 de agosto de 2008

My own Toronto's top 10

When I arrived in Toronto, I bought a guide book called “TOP 10 Toronto”. I have other books of this collection about other cities and I like them very much, because they are small and you can carry them in your pocket. They also have good maps and plenty of informations. In theses books you always have rankings: the 10 best places to eat, the 10 best places to shopping and so on. The first thing you read is the general Toronto’s Top 10. According to the authors, they are ROM, CN Tower, Toronto Islands, AGO, Casa Loma, Distillery Historic District, Ontario Place, Eaton Centre, Hockey Hall of Fame and Niagara Falls.
Now, I’m going to give my opinion about the Toronto highlights and make my own ranking. First of all, I unfortunately couldn’t go the AGO (Art Gallery of Toronto), wich is closed until September or October. Probably it would be in my list if I had been able to go there.
So, my personal top ten list would be:
1 – Toronto Island: I went there with Paula in a sunny day and I liked a lot. It’s a beautiful and peaceful place, with an amazing view of the city. It’s the perfect place to make a pic nic.
2 – CN Tower: It really worth the visit. It has an amazing view and is also something very different and interesting in Toronto’s landscape.
2 – Harbourfront centre – It’s my preferred place in Downtown. It’s good to walk, to ride a bicycle, to see one of the many free concerts that they have there during summer or simply to eat something in the international market.
3 – Rogers centre – I liked very much of going there to see a Blue Jays game, much more than if I went to a much more expensive hockey game. The Canadian football match that I saw there was also fun, especially because they had covered the stadium and it looked very different from the time I went to see a baseball game.
4 – Wonderland – Very fun, although also scaring place. See my other post.
5 – Chinatown and Danforth – very good places to eat good, different and (very important!) cheap food.
6 – Queen Street West and Yonge Street: good streets to just walk by and to window-shopping.
7 – Design stores: You can find some very nice design stores and galleries in Harbourfront centre, Queen Street West or in the Distillery Historic District, where you can buy really nice gifts.
Category “Good, but not that much”
1 – Royal Ontario Museum – nice museum, but not as good as the European greatest museums (Museo del Prado, Louvre, Uffizzi Gallery, National Gallery). The Natural History floor is interesting and kids love it. The third floor has a very good and educational exhibition about European art, explaining the different artistic movements and periods through its furniture collection.
2 – Niagara Falls: To go to the “maid of the mist” boat is really nice, but the rest of the place is not a big deal. The city near the Falls is very, very ugly, and looks like a decadent Las Vegas.

I didn’t go to Casa Loma, Ontario Place or Hockey Hall of Fame, because I was not interested, didn’t have time or money to spend there. I don’t think I will regret that.

coming back home

It’s almost the day of my return to Brazil. On Saturday, just after the end of YUELI course, I will take a flight back to Brazil. These two months in Canada were a very good experience, but it’s time to return. I have so many things to do in Brazil and some many things waiting for me in my job… I have had a very heavy routine in Rio in the last few years, working and studying, taking more than one hour to arrive at my job every day, and an opportunity like this one I had of coming here to study in English is also some kind of vacation. Actually, I had to use my vacation to be allowed to come here, but this change in routine is also good. Taking exactly 5 minutes to arrive in the classroom from my residence bedroom, for example, is something that I really appreciate. Here in Canada, although we had a lot of homework, I had much more free time than I usually have in Brazil. I could see a lot of movies in dvd that I never have time to see at home. During the weekdays I’m very busy and the weekends end so fast… Of course that I miss a lot of things, like my girlfriend, my family (my five years old niece), my friends etc. And this kind of thing of living in other country, in a strange place, meeting people that you don’t know very well is Ok for some time. I start missing my house, my bedroom, my stuff. Two months is a good time to spent out of you country. It’s enough time to get to know well a city, to be used with the routine, to experiment different foods, to see many places, and, finally, to return home before you get very tired of those things. I’m starting to get tired of the food I’m eating here (oriental food, junkie food, cookies, cesar salads etc). Of course that after same time in Brazil I will also be tired of Brazilian food, of my house, of my routine, but then it would be time to take another vacation.

quinta-feira, 14 de agosto de 2008

Surprise in Montreal

Something unexpected has happened to me and Paula when we are in Montreal. We were leaving the subway station to go to the Montreal Tower when a group of Chinese came to us and asked “metro?”. As we were in front of it, we just pointed it, but they didn’t move. I didn’t care to them and I was taking a picture when they asked again: “metro?”. I really suspected that it was something odd, but I didn’t know what to do. I started walking with Paula, but they came after us. When we stopped, they also stopped. The group was not reallly "normal". They were five or six person of different ages; all of them dressed like people usually think that tourists are dressed (colorful shirts, cameras on their necks, safari hats etc). When we looked at them, the same girl who has talked to us before just repeated: “metro?”. Paula even put her used subway ticket on the Chinese man’s pocket as they insisted following us. Finally, one of them came to us and said: It’s “just for laughs”. Another girl with sunglasses and a paper on her hand also came to us from another side smiling. I won’t say that I really knew what had happened, but I did had an idea, because I had seen a strange tent that I thought it would be the place where a TV camera could be hidden. But even knowing that it was a joke, you cannot know what to do. It’s impossible not to be embarrassed. I thought that people were usually paid to accept this kind of play, but the girl asked us to sign an image use authorization and didn’t give us any money… I signed it anyway, because as it had had already happened, at least I would try to be good-humored about it. They told me that it would be shown on TV just in 2009, but I hope nobody will remember to see us in “Just for laugh”. Well, at least I can say that I have participate of something very Canadian during my stay here.

Toronto X Montreal

On August 4th Holiday, Paula and I travelled to Montreal, where we spent three days. It was a very nice trip and we enjoyed a lot, although the weather was not good, and it rained a bit. However, I was talking to her that I like most of Toronto than Montreal, even though people used to say to me that Montreal was nicer. I don’t know if it is because I have been living for more than a month here in Toronto and I already have a special feeling about this city. I have lived for two months in Madrid last year and it was sort of the same thing, because at the end I could say that I liked more of Madrid than Barcelona, although everybody else preferred then capital of Cataluña, which is actually more exuberant.
Montreal is a nice city and has the neighborhood called “Old Montreal” which is really beautiful. However, I think that some people like Montreal because it looks like Paris. It’s true, in Montreal you have a “quartier latin” with many restaurants and coffee-bars just like you have in Paris and even a subway station imitates the French “metropolitan” (photo). But if you have ever been in Paris, Montreal is not as charming as it might be. It’s different from Quebec City, for example, that I think it has its own personality. I spend just one day there and enjoyed a lot. Even if they have a castle that was actually built in the beginning of the 20th century, Quebec doesn’t look like a Canadian copy of an European city. Its blue grayish house roofs were really pretty (photo). And finally, some things that Montreal has, Toronto also has. Between Montreal Tower (which is really nice and was built for the 1976 Olympic Games - photo) and CN Tower, I prefer the latter, which is also higher than the first. The Chinatown in Toronto is also bigger – and more interesting – that the Montreal’s one. But I don’t want it to sound like I if disliked Montreal. I liked a lot of the Cinémathéque of Montreal, for example, much better than the Ontario Cinémathéque in Toronto, which is just a screening room, even if it’s a real good one. And I liked a lot of the houses in Sherbrook Street, which were really beautiful too.

quarta-feira, 30 de julho de 2008

Wonderland (or Nightmareland)

I had one of the most terrifying experiences of my life last Sunday, when we went to the Wonderland I haven’t been in an amusement park for, maybe, twelve years. As soon as we arrived, people decided to go to Behemoth, the new roller coaster that is the biggest one in Canada. When you are there, it stars to go up, up, up, and when you are so high, it falls. And find some nice videos in the net if anyone wants to see how it is. This animation gives you the point of view of the first car. This video in you tube was recorded there and I screamed as much as this guy.
But as scaring as the Behemoth is the Drop Tower. You can see how it is in these videos (this or this). You just fall from a 230 feet height! My hands were shaking so much after that. Look at this picture after we had felt.

However, the other rides and plays were very nice and I enjoyed a lot my day. I met two Saudi Arabs guys and a Vietnamese that were very nice. These pictures were sent by Neo and Tony and by Maria.


There were some plays that you really get wet, and we were lucky that the weather was nince, although the water was very, very cold.


The picture above is from the play that we went. The picture below is us after going in that play.

Sports in Toronto

Last week I had new experiences in Toronto. On Monday we went to see a Tennis match in Rogers Cup - a Tournament of the Master Series - as part of a YUELI trip. And on Friday, Ayana, Chie and Maria invited me to see a Baseball game of the famous Toronto Blue Jays. Actually, I had never before been neither in a tennis match nor in a baseball game. To be sincere, I barely knew baseball rules or how to count points in Tennis. But both experiences were very nice. In Rogers Cup I was surprised because the first match was with Boris Becker. This German guy I used to see in TV when I was a kid! But it was just a exibition match. The real match was between a Canadian and a Croatian player. None of them were really very good, but I enjoyed my time. It was funny to hear Puma crazy about “Federô” (Roger Federer) or hear people supporting the Canadian player (who won), yelling “Go, Frank!”
But I liked more of the Blue Jays. The Roger Centre stadium is very beautiful and I discovered that the game is not the most important thing in a baseball game. The guy who plays the organ during the breaks is so important as the player, because he keeps playing songs and keeps the people happy. At the end of the game I was also singing/screaming “Let’s go, Blue Jays, Let’s Go!”. And I discovered also that a baseball game is an interesting game. It is a very American game because it can be played by anyone. Baseball players don’t look like athletes, but they are just like a fat bus driver or an old plumber. It’s a regular men sport. And although the match was a bit boring in the middle (It lasted almost three hours!), the end was really very exciting! You can see pictures and have more information about the game in Maria’s blog.

quarta-feira, 23 de julho de 2008

pronunciation

Yesterday I was a bit depressed because of my english pronunciation. I went to the Library to borrow a dvd. The film was called "Out of the past" (a noir with Kirk Douglas, with a funny face). I asked the guy in the desk and I realized that he started to look for the dvd on the "A" shelf. He returned and started writing in the computer the name of the film, that he though it was "All of the best". I said again, but he didn't understand. I repeated again and he half-understood ("Out of the best"? he said). Finally, after I repeated a dozen times, trying to change my pronunciation in many different forms, he said: AH! Out of the Past! Then I realized that I really was not speaking corretly... I told this story to Don and he nicely did in the class a pronunciation exercise: live / lead, itch/ each, beach and b... , Sheet and s...

quinta-feira, 17 de julho de 2008


Me and my girlfriend, Paula, who's coming to Toronto in august to visit me. This picture was taken last year, when we were walking in the famous "Pão de Açucar" (Sugar Loaf) in Rio.

quarta-feira, 16 de julho de 2008


Chie, Puma and me in a picture taken by Maria, last sunday, in our visit to Black Creek Pioneer Village.

great movies today and before

It has passed 12 p.m. and I've just came back from the Cinematheque Ontario, in downtown, where I saw a wonderful movie. It was my second time there. I knew that there was a cinematheque in Toronto, but I didn't know where it was until last tuesday, when I went there by chance. That day I saw a great movie called Stray Dogs, by Akira Kurosawa, and took the magazine with the screenings calendar. I was curious to see this movie, Ikiru, also by Kurosawa, that would be screened today, but I almost stayed at "home" (in my bedroom in the residence), because I was very tired. But I decided to go and it was the right decision. The film has immediatly became one off my all-time favorites. It's such a beautiful story, shot with such intelligence and sensibility... I fell strange when I go out of a movie theather after seeing a great film like this one. It's almost like if the film is still inside of you, because you keep thinking about it and, at the same time, felling some kind of hapiness for such beauty that you have seen in the screen. You always carry something home - tears, thoughts or smiles. I remember of felling this way in some other times, specially when I go to a movie theater in another country, usually to see some special film, in a rare and good print. I remember, for exemple, when I was in Lisbon and went to the "Cinemateca Portuguesa" a very nince movie theather, to see a film that I had never heard about, but that was announced as a masterpiece. And they were right. The film was "The Cheat", a silence movie by Cecil B. De Mille, and I was completely astonished by the movie, a melodrama that seems they never did again after the sound came. Another experience that I had with silent films happened last year, in Madrid, in Cine Doré (in the picture), a beautiful moive theather from the beginning of the twentieth century that is now maintained by the "Filmoteca Española". They were screening a great retrospective of the american filmmaker Henry King and I went to see one of his most famous silent movies called "Tol'able David". I got completely surprised with the movie. The film touched me so much and I never thought that I would see such a impressive performance by a silent movie actor like the one by Richard Barthelmess as the young boy David. In Paris, the city of lights, of course, I have also seen many great movies, including the first time I saw Buster Keaton's The General or Murnau's Nosferatu. But what I remember most is one night when I decide to go to a small ordinary theather that you entered by a door and had to go down a stair, to see, in a marvellous print, the Ernst Lubitsch's "Une heure prés de toi" (One hour with you). I had had already seen his charming "Merry Widow", with the same enchanting Maurice Chevalier, but this film impressed me for being so lovely and naughty at the same time. For our days of political correctness, the film is so advanced (and it was made in 1932)! Well, I have been talking about my movies experiences around the world, but of course that I have also lived this in Brazil and I can remember as it was today of the day I saw for the first (and, until today, the only) time Murnau's "Sunrise". Truffaut once wrote that this is the most beautiful film of all. I totally agree with him. But there many other masterpieces to be discovered. I'm very happy because I discovered one more today and I can add one more film for this list of special moments that I have lived and an spectator. "Ikiru" (To Live), what a movie...

sábado, 12 de julho de 2008

my first post

I´ll write in this blog about my impressions on Toronto. Before I came to Canada, people in Brazil asked me how canadian food was, and I didn't know. Well, I'm here for almost two weeks and I still don't know. They eat a lot of nuts, cookies and muffins with a lot of butter on them, and like of very much of smoked salmon. There're a lot of fast food restaurants here, including canadian Tom Horton, that I think it's very funny because they sell a lot of coffee. In Brazil people don't drink coffee in fast food restaurants... Canadian food is world food. Since I arrived here I have eaten korean food, tibetean food, greek food and some of them I had never eaten before. Of course I'm used to oriental food and in my countries there are a lot of chinese and japanese restaurants. But there, they serve always the most famous dishes: sushi, sashimi, yakisoba, spring rolls... I had never been to a korean restaurant before coming to Canada, and I liked a lot. The fist thing that called my attention is that in the table there were a big bottle of some kind of tea. After the food I realized that it was important to have something to drink, because the food was very spice. I was used to use just hashi (the short sticks) made of wood, but they used one of a different material that were much more difficult to hold. I ate a soup with noodles and meat, wich were very good, but had a bad time experience trying to catch those noodles. My table was a mess and I probably looked like a child eating (not a korean child, of course). At the end I was satisfied but tired! After that, I went to other places and the food was always spicy. I went to a italian restaurant (cafe diplomatique) and even a "gnochi a matriciana" was spicy! I had never eaten before a spicy pasta! The greek food was also spicy and even a hamburguer had a lot of pepper too. Now I know that canadian food is spicy food, no matter where it came from.