Jorge Thielen Armand
La Soledad , Jorge Thielen Armand (2016)
Jorge Thielen Armand is a Venezuelan film director and producer. His short Flor de la Mar (2015), revolving around a community of fishermen on a remote Venezuelan island, premiered at Sarasota, RIDM - Montreal International Documentary Festival, FICMA International Environmental Film Festival, and Cine Las Americas International Film Festival, where it won the Jury Award for Best Documentary Short. Having participated in the Biennale College - Cinema, Jorge Thielen Armand's feature film debut La Soledad premiered at the Venice Film Festival before going on to win dozens of awards at film festivals across the world.
In an exclusive interview for Filmatique, Thielen Armand discusses patience and stamina, cinematic representations of violence, the subjective nature of sound, and his upcoming film La Fortaleza.
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FILMATIQUE: La Soledad chronicles the precarious existence of a family residing in a dilapidated Caracas mansion. You have stated in the film's press notes that the impetus to make this film arose during a long absence from Venezuela, when you heard that the film's shooting location, your family home, had been scheduled for demolition. What motivated you to incorporate narrative elements into the film rather than capturing this story in a strictly documentary fashion?
JORGE THIELEN ARMAND: I thought a more fictional approach would allow me to incorporate the supernatural elements of the film, and provide me with a more malleable canvas to utilize the film's visual metaphors.
FLMTQ: Glimpses of Venezuela's current economic crisis can be seen in the scarcity of food and medicine, as well as José and his family's struggle to survive amid a lack of support or opportunities. The crisis is thus viewed obliquely, framed within the intimate stories of the film's characters, rather than being exploited. What challenges did you face while filming on location in Caracas during these deteriorating conditions, and how did you overcome them?
JTA: Filming in Caracas was extremely challenging. Inflation makes it impossible to control a film budget and the scarcity of certain products really weighed down on us. One day we had someone in the art department ride a motorcycle around Caracas for the whole day in search of consumer C-type batteries that we wanted to use to power the metal detector. Our camera assistant couldn't find tape for marks, and many talented people left the country. In fact, 80% of the crew that worked on La Soledad no longer lives in Venezuela. The crisis just weighs on everyone logistically, and emotionally. It takes a lot of patience and stamina to make a film under such conditions.
FLMTQ: While never overtly visible, the theme of violence lurks at the edges of frame, whether in the Youtube videos José watches or suggestions by his brother's friends that José resort to kidnapping for money. What was your approach to representing the threat of violence in La Soledad, and what responsibility do you believe filmmakers have to address violence and its conditions without sensationalizing it?
JTA: I wanted to make a film without any visible violence. There is a tradition of crime films in Venezuela, and I wanted to stay away from that. Violence in film can be distracting sometimes, and I wanted to focus on how the crisis, along with the threat of violence, impacted the life of the people in La Soledad.
La Soledad , Jorge Thielen Armand (2016)