Los Angeles Times

Moving forward in face of tragedy

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

A Brazilian soccer club’s efforts to recover from the loss of 19 players and 25 staff members in a plane crash are movingly chronicled in the penetratin­g documentar­y “Nossa Chape” (Portuguese for “Our Team”).

The Chapecoens­e players and staff were en route to a tournament in Colombia on Nov. 28, 2016, when their charter flight ran out of fuel and crashed into a mountain ridge.

Just three of its players — Alan Ruschel, Neto and Follmann — would make it out alive, and as they convalesce­d from serious injuries, the club’s management determined that it would best serve the tightknit community by moving forward and rebuilding the team in time for the 2017 season, a mere two months away.

The resulting growing pains are affectingl­y delineated by Jeff and Michael Zimbalist, sports documentar­ians who are back in the zone after their less-assured 2016 scripted feature debut, “Pelé: Birth of a Legend.”

Along with co-director Julián Duque, they have crafted something more intriguing than the standard inspiratio­nal overcoming­obstacles story.

Through revealing interviews with the three survivors, scarred psychologi­cally as well as physically, along with equally articulate commentary from widows and the town’s compassion­ate mayor, the documentar­y probes that trickyto-reconcile bridge between honoring the fallen and moving forward. “Nossa Chape.” In Portuguese with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 41 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica.

 ?? Fox Sports Films ?? THE FILM chronicles efforts of the Chapecoens­e soccer club in Brazil to heal itself after huge loss.
Fox Sports Films THE FILM chronicles efforts of the Chapecoens­e soccer club in Brazil to heal itself after huge loss.

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