La Soledad (2016) Poster

(2016)

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6/10
A somewhat static portrait in a receding Venezuela
ricardo_j1 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This is a fiction film from the Venezuelan director Jorge Thielen Armand, his first full length film, which tells the story of Jose and his family who live in a large house called La Soledad. Thielen Armand take the opportunity to deliver a closer look at this Venezuela devastated by its own government, to the point that it feels that the context is as important as the story itself. La Soledad does not belong to Jose or his family and they suddenly have to leave because the country's economic situation force the family who owned to sell it.

Beyond this situation it gives the feeling that nothing much happens, but the picture manages to capture the viewer's attention, because it mixes the already terrible moment of the republic with some a kind of dreamlike, almost enchanted atmosphere which gives the film a tone that alternates with this almost documentary vision of what is happening in the country. These two ways works just fine, but at the end it feels like they gave us more an inside of José's feelings and thoughts than anything else. It is worth seeing.
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10/10
This extraordinary film cries out to be seen
MOscarbradley13 September 2017
Third World poverty is a subject the cinema seems unwilling to tackle, perhaps understandably so since the movies are fundamentally a commercial enterprise and 'entertainment' is the name of the game. When 'western' cinema tackles the subject, (and I am thinking here of Hollywood cinema), it tends to romanticize it or make it the subject of a thriller so it's often left to 'native' cinema to deal with their own issues and a lot of the time, when they do, the subject is turned around and treated as an 'action' flic or simply ignored altogether. "La Soledad" is mercifully, and thankfully, the exception.

Jorge Thielen Armand's film hails from Venezuela where poverty and crime are debilitating issues. In a society ruled by violence Negro and his family have virtually nothing, living on the edge and with the likelihood of being thrown out of the crumbling mansion where they are virtual squatters. There is no melodrama in the telling of their tale and little drama either. Armand simply observes his characters as they struggle from one day to the next. This could be a documentary and his cast, all playing themselves, respond with extraordinarily naturalistic 'performances'. The tragedy lies in our knowledge that for many people in Venezuela life is unlikely to get any better than it is shown here. 'Action', for want of a better word, when it happens does so off-screen and yet, never for a moment, could you describe this film as boring; the potential for a violence never actually seen is never far from the surface. Let's hope this extraordinary film finds the audience it deserves.
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9/10
The Stains Of Time Are Ever Present in This Story and Its Reality
Giulio_Trejo-Martinez9 August 2018
The first time i watched this movie, I was taken aback by the hypnotizing cinematography that hi-lighted the ruins of the house it is shot in. As the images presented theme-selves on screen, i realized that i was now way too involved in what was to happen with the characters. By the time the ending came about i was filled with a feeling of dread and hope, something that ached for weeks onwards.

But the impact the film had on me further grew as I researched more. The characters in the film, are playing themselves and reenacting a situation that is still happening to them. I've never heard of a movie do something like this, and the level of performance acquired from these suffering non-actors is something else. This is not something to be missed.
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9/10
Shocked to Learn These Aren't Professional Actors
jamaica-2125325 December 2023
I decided to watch this movie because I was interested in learning more about the crisis in Venezuela from the perspective of those living it. However, I thought that this certainly would be a fictitious, if authentic feeling, take. I am flabbergasted that this is a true story portrayed by those experiencing it.

Where others may find the movie static, I found it compelling and appropriately paced for an intimate story that is unfolding practically in real time. Importantly, I had no idea that the actors were not professionals until researching the film afterward. The unvarnished vulnerability and searing honesty is breathtaking.

Glimpsing how the characters experience joy in the midst of devastation is definitely worth the watch.
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