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Horror movie? No, it's global mourning.

Actresses Carol Castro, Rosamaria Murtinho, Nathália Timberg, Suzana Vieira, and Barbara Paz, from the telenovela "Amor à Vida," posed in dismay, dressed in black, in protest against the decision of Minister Celso de Mello, who granted some defendants in Criminal Action 470 the first opportunity to appeal; apparently, the actresses have no regard for individual freedoms and guarantees; there was a time when representatives of the arts, such as Tônia Carrero, Odete Lara, Eva Tudor, Eva Wilma, and Norma Bengell, fought against the dictatorship; today, they seem to want judicial arbitrariness.

Actresses Carol Castro, Rosamaria Murtinho, Nathália Timberg, Suzana Vieira, and Barbara Paz, from the soap opera Amor à Vida, posed in dismay, dressed in black, in protest against the decision of Minister Celso de Mello, who granted some defendants in Criminal Action 470 the first opportunity to appeal; apparently, the actresses have no regard for individual freedoms and guarantees; there was a time when representatives of the arts, such as Tônia Carrero, Odete Lara, Eva Tudor, Eva Wilma, and Norma Bengell, fought against the dictatorship; today, they seem to want judicial arbitrariness (Photo: Leonardo Attuch).

247 - Almost without makeup, and dressed in black, they face the camera. From Carol Castro, champion of "Dancing with the Stars," comes an indignant look. From Rosamaria Murtinho, comes a serious air, as if staring into the abyss. Nathália Timberg throws a sharp blade at whoever looks at her. From Suzana Vieira, the dismayed look, like that of a Pilar who has just been betrayed by the womanizing doctor. And Bárbara Paz, with black eyeliner, strikes her traditional dark pose.

The actresses from Globo, who are part of the cast of Walcyr Carrasco's "Amor à Vida," did not pose together to promote a horror film or the Brazilian version of "The Addams Family." They are in mourning because Minister Celso de Mello, of the Supreme Federal Court, granted some defendants in Criminal Action 470 the first opportunity to appeal in what Globo calls "the trial of the century."

There was a time when actresses, such as Tônia Carrero, Odete Lara, Eva Tudor, Eva Wilma, and Norma Bengell, united in defense of freedom and fought against a dictatorship, as in the image below, from the March of the Hundred Thousand:



Today, celebrities unite in defense of arbitrariness and the trampling of the right to defense. Luckily, their opinion doesn't matter in the slightest. The 1968 photo went down in history. The current one will remain restricted to Barbara Paz's Instagram (land still the text by Kiko Nogueira Regarding the "infringing hammy acting" of Globo actresses in Diário do Centro do Mundo. According to Kiko, the Globo actresses ended up making a tremendous fool of themselves.