Jorge Preloran Explained

Jorge Preloran
Birth Date:May 28, 1933
Birth Place:Buenos Aires
Death Place:Culver City
Nationality:Argentine and American

Jorge Ricardo Preloran (May 28, 1933  - March 28, 2009) was an Argentine filmmaker and a pioneer in ethnobiographic film making.[1] [2]

Life and career

Preloran was born in Buenos Aires to an Argentine father and an Irish American mother. He made a short film, Venganza, in 1954, and left Argentina to enroll at UCLA, graduating with a film studies major in 1961. Holding dual citizenship, he served with the U.S. military in West Germany.[3] He began a career as a filmmaker in 1961, when the Tinker Foundation offered him a grant to make several films on the gauchos of Argentina.[4] Preloran sought to redefine the genre of ethnographic films, moving away from depicting their subjects as exotic or primitive, striving to make films that, as he told Americas magazine, "do not use the people about whom they are made."[1]

From 1963-1969 Preloran produced educational films and films on Argentine folklife at the Universidad Nacional de Tucumán in Tucuman, Argentina. He also began to work in a style of ethnographic film known as ethnobiography, in which "the filmmaker gets closer to the subject to give a portrait of the subject as well as their culture and practices."[5]

His 1969 film Hermógenes Cayo (Imaginero) was recently listed as one of the ten best Argentine films of all times. In making this film, he spent months with the subject (artist Hermógenes Cayo) prior to shooting, and followed many of the subject's suggestions in the actual film-making. This relationship between filmmaker and subject was to be repeated through his career. Preloran made over 50 films in his lifetime, working in Argentina, the United States, Ecuador, and elsewhere.[6] [7] [8]

His 1980 film Luther Metke at 94 was nominated for the 1981 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.[9]

Preloran taught at the School of Theater, Film and Television at UCLA from 1976 to 1994. In 2007 he donated his life's work to the Human Studies Film Archives, Smithsonian Institution, where his films are being preserved and made available for research. Preloran died in Culver City in 2009, at age 75.[1]

Filmography

Further viewing

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Jorge Preloran dies at 75; Argentine filmmaker and former UCLA professor. Elaine. Woo. April 5, 2009. April 6, 2009. Los Angeles Times.
  2. News: Jorge Prelorán 1933 - 2009. April 1, 2009. April 6, 2009. UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100713054813/http://www.tft.ucla.edu/news/obituary/599-jorge-preloran_obit/. July 13, 2010.
  3. Web site: DER Filmmaker: Jorge Preloran. Documentary Educational Resources. 9 December 2012.
  4. Web site: Grant will allow restoration of four Jorge Prelorán films. Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin. 9 December 2012.
  5. News: Belhumeur. Jenna. Documentary presents tribute to Jorge Prelorán. 9 December 2012. Daily Bruin. 7 April 2011.
  6. http://www.cinenacional.com/personas/index.php?persona=9279 Cine Nacional: Jorge Prelorán
  7. Book: Rossi, compilación y comentarios, Juan José. El Cine documental etnobiográfico de Jorge Prelorán. 1987. Ediciones Búsqueda. Buenos Aires, Argentina. 9505600488. 191–193. 1a.
  8. Book: Taquini, Graciela. Jorge Prelorán, Volume 19 of Directores del cine argentino. 1994. Centro Editor de América Latina.
  9. Web site: Awards for Luther Metke at 94 (1980) at IMDb. . April 5, 2009.
  10. Web site: Foley. Karma. June 2012. Guide to the Jorge Prelorán films. 2021-04-27. sova.si.edu. Smithsonian: National Museum of National History. 22.