Culture
Key Facts
—The film. “Funk,” directed by Aly Muritiba, had its world premiere in the International Narrative Competition at the 2026 Tribeca Festival in New York.
—The prize. Lead Duda Santos and singer MC Nem shared a Special Jury Mention for Best Performance in an International Feature.
—The subject. It follows a young woman trying to become a star in Rio de Janeiro’s favela funk scene.
—The cast. Real funk musicians, including MC Nem, Lellê and DJ Crazy Jeff, perform alongside professional actors.
—The festival. Tribeca marked its 25th anniversary this year, screening 118 features, including a record 103 world premieres.
—The director. Muritiba previously made “Private Desert,” Brazil’s 2022 submission for the Academy Awards.
A film about a favela singer chasing fame in Rio de Janeiro’s most homegrown music scene has just won over the jury at Funk Tribeca’s biggest competition, carrying one of Brazil’s most loved and most looked-down-upon art forms onto a major international screen.
“Funk,” a Brazilian musical drama directed by Aly Muritiba, had its world premiere at the 2026 Tribeca Festival in New York and walked away with a jury honour. Its lead actress, Duda Santos, and the singer MC Nem shared a Special Jury Mention for Best Performance in an International Feature.
The recognition matters because of what the film is about. It follows Sabrina, a young woman from a Rio de Janeiro favela who is determined to become a star in the funk scene, the bass-heavy, sexually frank street music born in those same neighbourhoods.
What Funk Tribeca recognition means for Brazil
A favela, for readers unfamiliar with the term, is a dense, low-income neighbourhood on the edges of Brazilian cities, often built informally on hillsides. Funk music grew out of these communities and is treated by polite Brazilian society much as early rap was treated in the United States: hugely popular, commercially powerful, and frequently dismissed or even policed as vulgar.
Putting that world on screen at a festival like Tribeca, and winning a performance prize there, is a small act of cultural validation. The jury praised the two leads for their energy and for showing a fresh side of favela life through music and dance.
The casting underlines the point — rather than hiring only trained actors, Muritiba filled the film with real funk artists, including MC Nem, who plays the lead character’s mother, alongside the singer Lellê and the DJ known as Crazy Jeff. The result blurs the line between the music scene and the story about it.
Reviewers at the festival read the film as more than a rags-to-riches tale. They described it as a study of race and class, contrasting the open, unfiltered style of the favela performers with the more guarded manners of the wealthy, largely white audiences who consume their music.
A festival moment in a strong run for Brazilian film
Tribeca, founded in New York in 2002, celebrated its 25th edition in 2026 with 118 feature films, including a record one hundred and three world premieres. “Funk” screened in the International Narrative Competition, the section reserved for the festival’s strongest non-American fiction.
Muritiba is not a newcomer to the international circuit. His earlier feature “Private Desert” was Brazil’s official submission for the Academy Awards a few years ago, so this latest title arrives with a recognised name behind it.
The win also lands during an unusually bright stretch for Brazilian cinema abroad. The country took its first Oscar for Best International Feature with “I’m Still Here,” and a steady flow of Brazilian titles has reached major festivals since, giving the industry a credibility it can use to attract co-productions and streaming deals.
From the favela to a global sound
The film arrives as Brazilian funk has quietly become one of the country’s most exported sounds, alongside samba and bossa nova. Its rhythms now turn up in international pop production and on streaming playlists far beyond Brazil, even as the genre remains contested at home.
That tension is the heart of the story. Sabrina’s rise forces a choice between the raw, unfiltered style that made her popular in the favela and the smoother version a mainstream manager wants to sell, a dilemma familiar to any artist who breaks out of a local scene.
By casting working funk musicians in central roles, the film hands part of that narrative back to the people who actually live it. The Tribeca jury singled out exactly that authenticity when it praised the leads for revealing a side of favela life rarely seen on the festival circuit.
Why a foreign reader should care
For an executive or visitor with little background in Brazil, this is a useful window onto how the country exports culture. Funk is not a tourist-brochure version of Brazil; it is raw, commercial and rooted in the poorest urban areas, and it is increasingly one of the country’s most recognisable sounds.
When a film built around that scene is honoured in New York, it signals that Brazil’s creative output is being taken seriously on its own terms rather than as exotic colour. For foreign residents, it is also simply a film worth watching to understand the city they live in.
Frequently asked questions
What did Funk Tribeca win at the festival?
The Brazilian film “Funk” earned a Special Jury Mention for Best Performance in an International Feature, shared by its lead actress Duda Santos and the singer MC Nem, at the 2026 Tribeca Festival in New York.
What is the film about?
It tells the story of Sabrina, a young woman from a Rio de Janeiro favela who is determined to become a star in the city’s funk music scene, navigating questions of fame, authenticity, race and class along the way.
Who directed it?
The film was written and directed by Aly Muritiba, the Brazilian filmmaker behind “Private Desert,” which was the country’s official submission for the Academy Awards in 2022.
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