Bené (Benny)
Benny, a member of the Tender Trio who grew up alongside Li’l Zé, maintained a relatively intact character even within the violent City of God. He tries to mediate conflicts between gangs, and his death becomes the decisive catalyst that shatters the gang’s moral balance — far beyond a mere incident. Benny’s existence symbolizes the human connection that glimmers faintly within the cycle of violence.
Humanity Within Gang Violence: Benny’s Role and Symbolism
Benny grew up alongside Li’l Zé from childhood and maintained a relatively moderate character even within the violent environment of City of God. As a member of the Tender Trio, he tries to mediate internal conflicts — playing the role of human connection within this vast violent narrative. His existence is the core device through which this film asks, beyond merely recording crime, what is lost as the price of violence.
1. The Character Arc: From Calm to Departure
Benny’s initial portrayal shows him as the gang member with the best character. He gradually grows weary of the brutality of gang activities and reveals a desire to escape the life of violence. This change materializes when he resolves to leave for a farm with Angelica — an important turning point showing his will to break free from the cycle of violence.
2. The Decisive Scene: The Stray Bullet and the Fracture
What determines the trajectory of Benny’s life is his very death. Though accidental, its ripple effects shook the entire gang.
- Background: Benny was hosting a farewell party with Angelica, settling affairs to leave his violent life behind.
- The incident: Benny is killed by a stray bullet from Neguinho, who barged in to assassinate Li’l Zé. This death signifies the disappearance of the figure who mediated and supported stability within the gang.
- The consequence: With Benny gone, the balance within the gang collapses. This void eliminated the mediator between Cenoura and Li’l Zé, becoming the direct catalyst that triggered unavoidable full-scale war between the two great forces.
3. Interpretation: The Symbol of Lost Innocence
Rocket’s gaze evaluates Benny as “the best person in City of God.” This represents the moral standard Benny tried to maintain even within the extreme gang environment — a yearning for a normal life. His death shows the process by which the most innocent and human existence is cruelly sacrificed by the emotional violence of revenge and ambition. Benny plays the role of delivering to the audience, even briefly, the message that this place is not all violence.
Why It Matters
Benny goes beyond a mere supporting character to serve as the moral compass of the work. His existence represents the initial lightheartedness and human bonds the Tender Trio possessed. His attempt to break free from the cycle of violence paradoxically shows that even in the most brutal environment of City of God, individual will and a yearning for ordinary life exist. His death is the most important device symbolizing how easily, and how tragically, gang war can spiral out of control through individual emotional violence and misunderstanding.
Other Character dives4
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Cabeleira (Shaggy)
Cabeleira was a core member of the Tender Trio who dominated City of God in the 1960s, embodying the gang’s spirited and jovial atmosphere. He represents an era when crime in the favela still felt manageable, and his tragic death becomes the pivotal moment that first draws Rocket’s attention to a camera lens — the decisive catalyst for the film’s central theme of recording violence.
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Buscápe (Rocket)
Buscápe is far more than a simple photographer — he is the witness and the very camera lens recording the violent history of Rio de Janeiro’s favela. His gaze cuts through all crime and survival instinct in City of God across the 1960s–70s, throwing at the audience questions about the recording of violence and the moral limits of humankind.
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Sandro Cenoura (Carrot)
Sandro Cenoura (Carrot) symbolizes the existing power order of City of God. Leading a gang composed mainly of white members in an overwhelmingly Black favela, he is the leader of the entrenched forces confronting Li’l Zé’s radical violence. His actions oscillate between loyalty as a virtue and cold survival instinct, showing how the logic of violence is inherited and transformed across the power structure.

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City of God
12 deep dives in total