Balas E - Bolinhos 4
However, for the casual viewer or even the nostalgic fan who hasn't revisited the series in a decade, this feels like an echo. It has the wounds, the sweat, and the bad teeth of the original, but it has lost the desperate energy that made the first film a cult phenomenon. It proves that sometimes, the bullet that stays in the chamber is better than the one you fire too late.
For fans of the series, the callbacks are a treat. Seeing Rato’s manic paranoia and China’s terrifying silence again feels like visiting a weird, dysfunctional family. The film does not betray its cult roots; it knows exactly who it is for.
Balas e Bolinhos 4 is for the converted. If you own the first three films on DVD and quote them with your friends, you will find moments of joy here. It is a defiant middle finger to cinematic refinement. balas e bolinhos 4
You desperately miss early 2000s Portuguese low-budget crime. Skip it if: You need a plot that moves, clear audio, or characters with more than one emotion.
Rating: ★★☆☆☆ (2.5/5)
The story picks up where the third film left off, following the traumatized and grotesque characters (Rato, Kaxada, and the silent giant China) as they try to survive a new criminal scheme involving a mysterious suitcase. The plot, however, is merely a hanger for the film’s real intention: reuniting the old gang for one last chaotic night in the gritty streets of Porto.
There is a certain audacity to the Balas e Bolinhos franchise. Born from the early 2000s Portuguese "tasco cinema" (tavern cinema) movement, these films were never about polished scripts or Oscar-worthy acting. They were about grit, Porto’s underbelly, dark humor, and characters who looked like they hadn’t slept in a decade. After a six-year hiatus, Balas e Bolinhos 4: O Regresso do Campeão tries to reload the shotgun. Sadly, the trigger feels rusty. However, for the casual viewer or even the
Director Luís Ismael continues to shoot Porto like a film noir set in a sewer. The night photography is grainy and oppressive—intentionally so. However, the sound mixing remains a persistent problem for this franchise. Dialogue is often swallowed by ambient noise or the jarring electronic score. You will spend a good portion of the film asking, "What did he say?"

