Suzana Borges

Suzana Borges
Total Credits at Criticker: 7 (Actor)
Titles you haven't rated - Actor (7)
Vai e Vem
João Vuvu, a widower with no family, except for a son who is serving time for dual murder and armed bank robbery, lives alone in his own, large, sunny house that shows signs of wealth in an old neighbourhood of Lisbon
A Mulher que Acreditava Ser Presidente Dos EUA
Alexandra Lencastre stars as the title character who thinks her home in Lisbon on Washington Street is really The White House. On her birthday, she throws a huge party in honor of her re-election and plans to control the entire world.
Quem És Tu?
The tragedy of a woman who - after seven years of vain searches - gave up hope of finding her husband, a knight lost in battle in Marroc with Sebastião, king of Portugal. (imdb)
O Fatalista
Tiago and his master carry on a debate about free will. Tiago denies its existence, even as he engages in ever more unpredictable and provocative behavior. Rogue and master careen across the countryside, from car wreck to bordello to their next adventure.
Tráfico
Young Jesus is taken on a vacation by his parents to a deserted beach resort. They accidentally fall into overnight wealth after Jesus digs in the sand, uncovering a large drug stash. Others characters intersecting here include an alcoholic actress, a philandering banker, a general trafficking in arms, priests who close their church and head north as hitchhikers, politicians who watch an all-girl production of Julius Caesar, and beggars who recite a children's story in a huge heap of trash.
Lá Fora
She's a journalist. He's a corrector of the stock market. Both of them live in the same private high security building but never met.
A Princesinha das Rosas
"A Princesinha das Rosas", maybe the most known of the series depeloped by Noémia Delgado, is about Naíde, a girl born from the union between a fisherman and a mermaid, adopted by monarchs of a country with no heirs, but to whom the call of the waters will inevitably attract. Noémia films the story with a naïve simplicity that accentuates the film's dark fairytale tone.