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1-37 of 37
- Explores the personal and professional life of former NFL and Ole Miss quarterback Archie Manning and how the sudden loss of his father impacted his life and the way he and his wife Olivia raised their three sons.
- The story of João Gonçalves Filho, one of the great sportsmen in the country, who participated in seven Olympics and was one of those responsible for the most successful generation of Brazilian judo athletes of the Olympic Games .
- The trajectory of Wanda dos Santos, from humble childhood in São Paulo to the Olympic consecration. Wanda remains active at the age of 81, competing in veteran competitions and training other athletes. The documentary follows his routine, recalling his trajectory from the first medal in competitions until he reached the Olympics in Helsinki 1952 and Rome 1960, overcoming racism. A life of constant overcoming, translated into new titles and records, even in old age.
- After 16 years without winning any significant title, Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras won the Paulista Championship on June 12, 1993. The team experienced a period of fasting when he won the final against Corinthians, after bitter defeat in the first match of the decision. Led by coach Vanderlei Luxemburgo, the game only ended in injury, and the feet of the idol Evair, from the penalty spot, left the 4th goal. From there, Palmeiras back to his successful track record of titles.
- Maria Elisabete Jorge, known as "Bete do Peso", was the first weightlifter to defend Brazil in an Olympics.
- The invasion at Maracanã took place in December 5 1976 by Corinthians's faith followers, the match Fluminense vs. Corinthians registered officially more than 146.000 crowd, despite some unofficial sources said around 180.000 fans, even hundreds and thousand people stayed out of the stadium due didn't get a ticket to buy, they remained around there, this fabulous fact celebrated at Guinness Book as the greatest human displacement in peace-time never surpassed until now and never will, more than thousand bus, airplanes, motorcycles, cars, bicycles and even on foot, in the match Corinthians were much inferior than Fluminense actually had a true team called "Machine" but the amazing Corinthians's faith followers that occupied almost 60% of the stadium at Rio de Janeiro around more than 400 kilometers from the city of São Paulo, the match ended in a draw 1 x1 so the game was decided by penalties end up Corinthians winner by the score 4 x 1, Corinthians once more didn't reachs in their target, lost the championship on final decision at Porto Alegre against Inter, but nobody remember that, the most important fact is the invasion which is the subject of this historical documentary!.
- During the 80's, brazilians were living under a dictatorship (since 1964). Some players of the soccer club Corinthians, from São Paulo, begins a new form of managing the team, always using polling to decide everything.
- Who was Szabo? Why was he the greatest water polo player in Brazil? Why was he admired and crowded the pools?
- Adhemar Ferreira da Silva is the only Brazilian athlete who has won two consecutive gold medals in the same event at the Olympic Games. His history is marked by the overcoming of limits and summarizes the difficulties and challenges of Brazilian athletes in the last century: meteoric rise in sport and hardships and prejudices experienced in his career.
- Few athletes compete at the highest level. Some reach the podium; very few become champions. Perhaps they will even achieve fame. Rare, however, are those who transcend these achievements and achieve greater glory: the unanimous respect and admiration of those who live and love their sport. So it is with Chiaki Ishii, owner of the first of the 19 Olympic medals in Brazilian judo. The idol of all the idols of that sport. A man who put himself behind the spotlight and started to light the way of those who would come after him. This documentary is about his fantastic journey as a man and athlete.
- The story of Brazilian rowing coach Guilherme Augusto do Eirado Silva, known as Buck.
- Sylvio Padilha dedicated his life to Olympism in Brazil. As an athlete, he was the country's greatest hope in the 1930s, reaching the Olympic 400-meter hurdles final in Berlin, 1936. Passionate about the sport, his work as a sports manager was as striking as the huge collection of trophies and medals he won inside the tracks. In more than fifty years dedicated to the sport, Padilha marked his time and paved the future of an Olympic country.
- Originating from a period when cycling was not considered a professional sport, Anésio Argenton represents a whole generation of athletes who surprised their country by overcoming poverty to achieve the Olympic dream. Despite the countless difficulties, Argenton participated in the Olympic Games in Melbourne, in 1956, where he obtained the best result of Brazil in the history of the Olympics in track events, a record that remains unreached; and from Rome, in 1960. In addition, Argenton is the only Brazilian gold medalist in the Pan American Games in the modality (Chicago 1959).
- The story of Piedade Coutinho, the best placed Brazilian swimmer in the Olympics, and who was in the 1936, 1948 and 1952 editions.
- Documentary about the athlete, Manoel dos Santos Junior, swimmer, bronze medalist in the 100m freestyle, at the Olympic Games in Rome in 1960.
- Testimony of varied personalities about the Brazilian national football team of the 1982 FIFA World Cup.
- 5X Yane narrates the trajectory of the pentathlete Yane Marques, from the poor childhood in Afogados de Ingazeiro to the bronze medal at the London 2012 Olympic Games.
- There's no swimming without pain.
- How beach soccer started in the 1920s in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and became popular over the next decades.
- The history of women in sport is often confused with the history of women as a whole. While so many Brazilian women were fighting for the right to vote, divorce and free expression, some Brazilian women were fighting for the right to be present at one of the biggest events on the planet: the Olympics. And what could be simple and natural: it was not. Some appearances were dramatic. Others, isolated and lonely. As in society, in sport, women had to earn their rights by force.
- Memories of the first Olympics held in Latin America, Mexico, in 1968, in a world troubled by political and student revolts.
- Virtual reality documentary that accompanies four characters during the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, in 2016.
- Los Angeles, 1932. Despite the Great Depression, Hollywood gets ready to show the world a great spectacle, the 10th Olympic Games. However, away from the spotlight, a tropical delegation does everything to jump into the scene. A journey on a ship loaded with coffee, total lack of resources, lack of technical and emotional preparation superhuman effort: and these are just a few os the highlights. The Brazilian athletes won nothing in the Olympics, but their participation was a great adventure - truly worthy of a Hollywood movie
- Long before Senna and Piquet, motorsport in Brazil was already recognized worldwide. A tribute to the career of the sports drivers in the country, their stories and memories, narrated by the champion Emerson Fittipaldi.
- The documentary shares with all Brazilians the stories and memories generously told by Brazilian swimmer Maria Lenk. A unique material, priceless for the memory of the Brazilian Olympic sport.