Distributed by 20th Century Fox, the film also features well-known actors and actresses from Brazilian telenovelas such as Othon Bastos, Ana Rosa and Paulo Goulart, among others. It was shot on location in Rio de Janeiro and Brasília, during the months of July, August and September 2009, with its post-production taking 9 months to be completed.[2] It was released on September 3, 2010 in Brazil to great critical acclaim and more than one million viewers in its opening weekend.[3] In 2015, the Brazilian Spiritualist Federation (FEB) first announced the sequel to Astral City: A Spiritual Journey, entitled Nosso Lar 2: Os Mensageiros, was released on January 25, 2024.
Plot
When André Luiz, a selfish prominent physician and father of three, dies, instead of rising to what he believed would be heaven, he awakens in a valley of devastation. Living as a castaway, he, as well as the other spirits around him, is deemed to have been a suicide, and it is beyond him why he has had such a fate.
One day, a beam of light comes down from the sky bringing rescue to spirits in deep troughs of the Valley. André is rescued and lifted to a spiritual city named Nosso Lar (Our Home). There, he makes new friends and alliances but also meets his enemy – himself. He has betrayed his own existence by his self-destructive actions during his life on Earth, and, in order to prove he still truly values life, he must gain merits in the eyes of the city's Ministries through humbling hard work.
Finally, his greatest wish since arriving in the city comes true: he is granted permission to descend to Earth and see his wife and kids. Ten years have passed, his wife has remarried and his children have grown up. In this awakening moment, André has to put into play what he has learned back in Nosso Lar. He must accept his own death and step into another level of existence, learning to love and be loved, and that life never ceases.
Cast
Renato Prieto as André Luiz
Gabriel Azevedo as 20-year-old André Luiz
Gabriel Scheer as 10-year-old André Luiz
Fernando Alves Pinto as Lísias
Rosanne Mulholland as Eloísa
Inez Vianna as Narcisa
Rodrigo dos Santos as Tobias
Werner Schünemann as Emmanuel
Clemente Viscaíno as Minister Clarêncio
Ana Rosa as Laura, Lísias' mother
Othon Bastos as Anacleto, Governor of Nosso Lar
Paulo Goulart as Minister Genésio
Helena Varvaki as Zélia
Aracy Cardoso as Dona Amélia, André Luiz's patient
Selma Egrei as Luísa, André Luiz's mother
Nicola Siri as Ernesto, Zélia's current husband
Lisa Fávero as Clarice, André Luiz's daughter
Jeniffer Oliveira as 10-year-old Clarice
Amélia Bittencourt as Judite, Lísias' aunt
César Cardadeiro as Mariano, André Luiz's son
Pedro Lucas Lopes as 10-year-old Mariano
Chica Xavier as Ismália, André Luiz's maid
Cristina Xavier as 35-year-old Ismália
Production
Background
The film is an adaptation of the 1944 book of the same name, said to be dictated by the spirit André Luiz and psychographed by Chico Xavier, Brazil's best-known and respected medium, having channeled more than 400 books.[4] The book is considered a great classic of spiritist literature. Engaging the reader from a first-person narrative, André Luiz delivers his impressions of the spirit world he encounters after his death.
Detailed drawings of the city "Our Home" as well as the architecture of the buildings, ministries and homes, were created by the medium Heigorina Cunha through her observations made during her alleged travels outside of the body in March 1979, led and guided by the spirit Lucius. These drawings served as inspiration to create the visual architecture of the city depicted in the movie. Her drawings have been clarified and confirmed by Chico Xavier to correspond to the spiritual city of Rio de Janeiro called "Our Home".
Visual effects
Nosso Lar is rich in special effects. The majority of the movie takes place in this spiritual city, which is famous in the Spiritist movement. Many spiritists and spiritualists waited anxiously for the release of the film that recorded the second highest debut of a Brazilian film since the rebirth of Brazilian cinema in the 1990s, after Elite Squad: The Enemy Within, released one month later.[3]