The Gilded Cage: Ruben Alves
December 2013
Speaking by phone from Hong Kong where his film The Gilded Cage is screening at festivals, director Ruben Alves is surprised at how the film crosses cultural borders.
“Here in Macau they are loving it, which is cool! Travelling around the world with the movie has really been unbelievable. The film is about émigrés, a Portuguese family in Paris, but I have been surprised that it seems to appeal to people everywhere. It is dedicated to people who leave any country, who emigrate from any country, to try to find something better.”
Having worked as an actor in France for over a decade, what was it that made Ruben take the leap into becoming a director?
“I suppose you could say that I’ve always been a director as I like to create. My best friend is a producer, so we would always be taking a camera with us everywhere, and then making a movie every year just for our friends and us in the summer. I suppose that that means that being a director has always been something I wanted to do.
“When I was 20 I was an actor and I was making shorts, but when I was 30 my producer said, ‘Ruben, why don’t you write about your family and your Portuguese community?’ I had written a script about a French family in Portugal, and he thought that it was cool, but he said, ‘Why don’t you write instead about Portuguese people in France?’ At first I thought that might be too personal, but then I thought that maybe the time was right and that it could be homage to my parents. It’s not autobiographical, but it is inspired by my parents’ lives.”
What about Alves’ own small role in the film (as Miguel)?
“It’s very small! Some people say that it’s me doing a Hitchcock!”
Preparing to act in a forthcoming French biopic, Yves Saint Laurent, Alves is looking forward to his second feature film as director.
“I do want to direct again, but I don’t know when I will. I hope that I can make another movie like this, which seems to unite audiences around the world.”
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