When Marília Mendonça looked into the camera and delivered the line, “Perdoar eu sei que vou, mas esquecer é impossível” (“I know I will forgive, but forgetting is impossible”), she wasn’t just singing a lyric. She was handing down a verdict.
Marília Mendonça didn’t just write a song about cheating. She wrote a procedural drama. In the “Infiel” court, the heart is the crime scene, the truth is the weapon, and Marília—forever—is the judge.
Instead, the scene is stark and sobering: a modern courtroom.
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As Marília belts the chorus— “Você foi um infiel / Brincou com a minha dor” (“You were unfaithful / You played with my pain”)—the camera captures the faces of women in the audience singing every word back at her.
Marília plays the plaintiff. She sits in the witness stand, dressed elegantly but firmly—not as a victim, but as a prosecutor. The “Infiel” (the unfaithful man) sits across the room, visibly uncomfortable, forced to listen. The jury? The audience.
Today, the video sits at hundreds of millions of views. In the comments section, you will find thousands of women (and men) citing the date they “filed their own case.”