La tragedia del silencio
La tragedia del silencio | |
---|---|
Directed by | Arturo Acevedo Vallarino |
Written by | Arturo Acevedo Vallarino |
Cinematography | Hernando Bernal |
Music by | Alberto Urdaneta Forero |
Release dates |
|
Country | Colombia |
Language | Spanish |
La tragedia del silencio (literally "The Tragedy of Silence") is a Colombian silent melodrama film directed by Arturo Acevedo Vallarino and first screened on 18 July 1924 at the Faenza theatre in Bogotá. Filmed in black and white, it tells the story of a man suffering from leprosy. It was the first Colombian film during the silent film era with a film score, which was performed during the projection and was written by Alberto Urdaneta Forero.
At its first screening, the film was well received by critics and the public, and was later shown in Panama and Venezuela. Given the theme of leprosy, the film was criticized by some who believed it would have a negative impact on the image of Colombia. Despite parts of the film not surviving, the Fundación Patrimonio Fílmico Colombiano have retained a 22 minute 45 second excerpt from the film.
Synopsis
La tragedia del silenco is a romantic melodrama.[1] The 22 minute 45 second excerpt of La tragedia del silencio that remains shows that the film centres on a man suffering from leprosy.[2] He is an engineer working for Ferrocarril Central, and in his spare time develops plans for an orphanage with a family friend, Father Alberto. After being informed that he has leprosy, he tells his wife and daughter of his fatal illness.[3] A student then courts his wife.[2] As the engineer is about to commit suicide, he learns that his diagnosis is incorrect,[3] as a medical worker confused his test results with those of someone else. The engineer overcomes adversity and saves his marriage.[2]
Cast
- Lely Vargas
- Alberto López Isaza
- Gonzalo Acevedo Bernal as the student[3]
- Isabel Vargas S.
- Alberto Argáez
- Inés Medina Niño
- Germán Santacoloma
- Mercedes Niño Medina
- Jorgito Acevedo González
Production
Project
Arturo Acevedo Vallarino was the producer and director of a theatre company in Antioquia and one of the pioneers of Colombian cinema. After the introduction of foreign films into Colombia, theatres were not as profitable, leading Acevedo to create a production house in 1920, Acevedo e Hijos (Acevedo and Son),[4] originally known as Casa Cinematográfica Colombia.[5] Acevedo wrote and directed the film.[2]
According to Colombian film critic Luis Alberto Alvarez, to promote their film productions before releasing them, Acevedo e Hijos launched magazine Cine Colombiano, the first issue of which was published on 1 May 1924.[6] In this first issue, the main article reveals the prologue and first four chapters of the film, with Coutin H. González credited as the author of the article.[2] The musical score of the film, written by Alberto Urdaneta Forero, is also in this issue.[6]
Implementation
La tragedia del silencio was shot in temporary studios in the house of a priest named Moreira, which is now the location of the Jorge-Eliécer-Gaitán theatre.[4] Initially, the film was shot with a Pathé camera with a 45mm lens, but later a 35mm Kodak Ektachrome was used.[7] The chemicals used for the production of the film were purchased from Óptica Alemana,[7] a company located in Bogotá founded in 1914 by Ernesto Schmidt Mumm.[8][9] The photographic print was manufactured by the scientific section of airline SCADTA.[4]
With La tragedia del silencio, production company Acevedo e Hijos ensured that this was the first full-length entirely Colombian film, with all actors and production team members being born in Colombia.[2][5] It was the only Colombian film during the silent film era (1894 to 1929) to have a score.[2][10]
Reception
The promotion strategy for the film played on nationalist sentiment by announcing that La tragedia del silencio was the first authentically Colombian movie.[2] It was first screened to the public on 18 July 1924 in Faenza theatre in Bogotá, attracting a large audience.[5] There were several technical problems including power failure and projector errors, caused in particular by the nervousness of the director and his son, the director of the theatre Joaquín Francisco, and operator Gustavo Francisco.[4] However, the film was well received by the public and the press,[4] although some viewers complained about the poor image quality.[3] The theatre was crowded during the seventeen showings of the film, but it was not very successful financially.[4][5]
The first screening of La tragedia del silencio in Medellín was on 9 October 1924, and was praised by the local press as an important development for the Colombian film industry.[2] Following this screening, Colombian industrialist Gonzalo Mejía provided financial support to Acevedo e Hijos, resulting in the release of their next film Bajo el Cielo Antioqueño in 1925.[5] The film was also successful in Panama and Venezuela.[2][4]
As the film addresses the topic of leprosy, some viewers voiced concerns that Colombia was frowned upon by the world because of the film, and that it resulted in the decrease of the price of Colombian coffee abroad.[11]
Analysis
Topics covered
La tragedia del silencio does not address political, social, or economic topics, nor different cultural aspects such as the lifestyle of the Colombian population.[12] Acevedo did not intend for the film to create controversy, so it does not mention the situation in Colombia,[3] the plot of the film instead focusing narrowly on one man's struggle between life and death.[13] Although leprosy is the main theme of the film, there are other storylines that follow different protagonists and their motivations,[13] such as the husband learning he must face his destiny when he learns about his disease, which requires him to separate from his family. After learning he does not have leprosy, he most confront a rival (the student) to regain the love of his wife.[13]
The first issue of Cine Colombiano contained several images from La tragedia del silencio that could be allegories of Jesus, the Muisca myth of Bochica, or the Colombian civil wars.[2] The film has a religious aspect in the character of Father Alberto, who refers directly to Colombian Father Rafael Almansa.[2]
Film style
In an attempt to imitate the conventions of silent cinema in its infancy, the staging and acting of the film are exaggerated and artificial.[14] The equipment used by Acevedo had limitations, causing the indoor scenes to be underexposed and the outdoor scenes to be overexposed.[14] The Pathé camera did not allow camera movement, had imprecise definition, and dark rendering.[7] The Kodak Ektachrome lacked a large depth of field, producing a flat image, and required good lighting to operate effectively.[7] Overhead shots are most commonly used, with some medium shots and a small number of large shots.[14]
Conservation
In 1987, the documentary Más allá del silencio La tragedia gave an overview of the work done by the Acevedo family.[15] The documentary takes its name from La tragedia del silencio, however it also aimed to commemorate the first sound film of Colombia, Los primeros ensayos de cine parlante nacional, directed by Acevedo in 1937.[16]
The Fundación Patrimonio Fílmico Colombiano is conserving and restoring the first nitrocellulose recordings of Colombian films, as well as some earlier Columbian films.[17] It has been able to preserve 22 minutes and 45 seconds of La tragedia del silencio,[1][18] at 18 frames per second.[1] In 2009, the Fundación Patrimonio Fílmico Colombiano announced that it was releasing ten DVDs, including work by the Acevedo family.[19] On 24 August 2009, the restored version of the film inaugurated the seventh festival of Colombian cinema in Medellín (Spanish: Festival de Cine Colombiano Ciudad de Medellín).[20][21]
See also
Notes
- ^ a b c Nieto, Gómez & Torres 2006.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Torres a.
- ^ a b c d e Diaz 2002, p. 146.
- ^ a b c d e f g Silva 1981a.
- ^ a b c d e El Tiempo 1924.
- ^ a b Zuluaga 2008, p. 41.
- ^ a b c d Silva 1981b.
- ^ Óptica Alemana.
- ^ El Tiempo 2004.
- ^ Torres b.
- ^ Romero 1997.
- ^ Diaz 2002, pp. 127–128.
- ^ a b c Diaz 2002, p. 147.
- ^ a b c Diaz 2002, p. 148.
- ^ Proimágenes.
- ^ Torres 2012.
- ^ Zuluaga 2008, p. 101.
- ^ Suarez 2009.
- ^ El Tiempo 2009.
- ^ Arte en la Red 2009.
- ^ El Mundo 2009.
References
- Torres, Rito Alberto. ""Hemos de tener un arte propio" (II): la importancia de "La tragedia del silencio" en un periodo fundacional de nuestra cinematografía" (in Spanish). Fundación Patrimonio Fílmico Colombiano.
- Diaz, Libia Stella Gomez (2002). "The tragedia La tragedia del Silencio". Documentos de historia y teoría (in Spanish). Vol. 7. Universidad Nacional de Colombia. pp. 127–152. ISBN 9789589706633.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - "Cine Colombiano: LA TRAGEDIA DEL SILENCIO" (in Spanish). Colombia Proimágenes.
- Silva, Hernando Salcedo (1981). ""Entrevista con Gonzalo Acevedo (1)"". Crónicas del Cine Colombiano (1897-1950) (in Spanish). Carlos Valencia Editores.
- "Los Acevedo hacen cine" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 1924.
- Zuluaga, Pedro Adrián (28 January 2008). ¡Acción! Cine Colombia. Bogotá: Colombia National Museum. ISBN 9789588250380.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - Silva, Hernando Salcedo (1981). ""Entrevista con Gonzalo Acevedo (3)"". Crónicas del Cine Colombiano (1897-1950) (in Spanish). Carlos Valencia Editores.
- "Ernesto Schmidt Mumm, Pionero of óptica in Colombia" (in Spanish). Bogotá: Óptica Alemana.
- "90 años de servicio y vanguardia in the Optometría colombiana" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 19 November 2004.
- Torres, Rito Alberto. "Exposición Silente Cine Colombiano: Sonorización colombiano por el patrimonio audiovisual músicos uniandinos" (PDF) (in Spanish). Fundación Patrimonio Fílmico Colombiano.
- Romero, Diego Rojas (8 April 1997). Cine Colombiano: primeras noticias, primeros años, primeras películas (in Spanish). Revista Historia Credencial.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - "Más allá del silencio La tragedia" (in Spanish). Proimágenes Colombia.
- Rito Alberto Torres (December 2012). "Boletín 55: Jorge Nieto en el patrimonio colombiano filmic" (PDF) (in Spanish). Fundación Patrimonio Fílmico Colombiano. pp. 3–5.
- Nieto, Jorge; Gómez, Jorge Alberto Moreno; Torres, Alberto Rito; Moya Fundación Patrimonio filmic Colombiano (2006). Largometrajes colombianos in cine y video: 1915-2006 (PDF) (in Spanish). Bogotá: Fundación Patrimonio Fílmico Colombiano. p. 353.
- Suarez, Juana (2009). Colombia Cinembargo: ensayos Críticos sober cine y cultura (in Spanish). Valle University. p. 27. ISBN 9789586707640.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - González, Juan Carlos (14 October 2009). "Nuestra historia nuestra mirada" (in Spanish). El Tiempo.
- "El Festival de Cine Colombiano is Toma la Ciudad de Medellin" (in Spanish). Arte en la Red. 24 August 2009.
- "in Colombia reflejada el cine" (in Spanish). El Mundo. 24 August 2009.