Showing posts with label SineMindanaw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SineMindanaw. Show all posts
PERRY DIZON'S REVIEW ON SHEIKA
by: ROLAND VICTOR C. FURTON
Hala Land!!! New moon Na ba karon? Mo ekyas na ba ang Mercury Retrograde? Wasak ka mo review, Bay!
Yeah, Land, I don't know how to express this...while doing the shoot with the team, I enjoyed with lots of possibilities... Ga-hairline na mood swings..."emphatic nuances of the actor", man gyud ang imong pulong. Crazy mohimo og piyesa si Arnel!!! There were times that we stopped and laughed it out, and say: pang estudyante version napod, Bay!!!
Yes, may mga deliberate na signs and symbols, archetypal, sacred geometry, design coming from the sky, fighter planes, double character, fun, food and booze, discussions, cooking, shooting, di magkasinabot usahay, saving your act, luod-luod, and again, party after. Enjoy ang proseso!!!
But the craziest day of our life, was the first shooting day!!! Wow!!! We knew our mise en sce'ne, but Gary didn't have the footwear for the shoot. So,you want me to create a character out of the shoes??? :Tara Nonoy, let's go to the "UKay-UKay" and discover Gary!! Buanga, Bay! Buntag kaayong sayo, naghuwat pa mi nga mangabre ang ukayan sa Bankerohan...medyo layo sa set, (house of Asul), nga walay connection from the outside world... wasak@walang kuryente.com. We had to wrap the scene before dusk- wala kameng ilaw, at nasa kampanya lahat!!
It was the longest confrontation scene of all time.. The first draft/rough version, is a short short.18 minuter scene. But the final cut/movie version lasted less than 3minutes??? Hahaha!!! No sweat!!!
In the city, she changed her name to "Shie". Bag-ong lugar, bag-ong pangalan. Istorya ra bitaw nga makaingon ka og: Estoryaheeee!!!.. But, you have to follow a story/script. Ang sak-sak sinagol nga lingua franca Actors has to study hard to connect the invisible arch?
Believe...
Relax...
Survive..
***
FILIPINO ARTISTS AT THE DIFF (Dubai International Film Festival)
Making it through the CROSSFIRE
(Originally published in ILLUSTRADO MAGAZINE-GULF Issue 58)
Mindanaoans shared their voice and gained pride at the recently concluded
8th Dubai International Film Festival 2011
with the first ever entry of the film 'CROSSFIRE' to the international arena.
Present at the Festival were the Grand Prize Palanca and Gawad Urian Best Screenplay Awardee,
Director/Producer Arnel Mardoquio and
Gawad Urian Best Actress Awardee-Producer Fe Virtudazo-Hyde
who shared with Illustrado their advocacies and challenges in being independent filmmakers.
8th Dubai International Film Festival 2011
with the first ever entry of the film 'CROSSFIRE' to the international arena.
Present at the Festival were the Grand Prize Palanca and Gawad Urian Best Screenplay Awardee,
Director/Producer Arnel Mardoquio and
Gawad Urian Best Actress Awardee-Producer Fe Virtudazo-Hyde
who shared with Illustrado their advocacies and challenges in being independent filmmakers.
photo credit: Hadrian Hernadez /Gulf News
(L-R: Perry Dizon, AC Macheca, Fe Virtudazo-Hyde and Arnel Mardoquio)
************
"It all started with my passion for films," says the exuberant Fe Virtudazo-Hyde, also known as Fe GingGing Hyde, who was her usual pretty self in a lime-colored green dress. Recipient of Illustrado Magazine's Women of Substance honor, Fe's dedication and love for acting and filming have always been an open book. Now, her passion and hard work are paying off-her latest projects, which actually the third collaboration with Writer/Director/Producer Arnel Mardoquio., CROSSFIRE has entered and competed in the 8th Dubai International film Festival (DIFF).
But more than just sharing the success of their projects, Fe and Arnel's concern primarily is the advocacy that they share together. The two independent filmmakers, who also produced films such as HOSPITAL BOAT and SHEIKA, are passionate in advocating peace in Mindanao, the Southern part of the Philippines, as well as promoting talents from there. Fe quips, "If other people are promoting their advocacies through songs, paintings or writings, we use films to create awareness in what we believe in."
Indeed, the presence of the film CROSSFIRE in this year's edition of Dubai International Film Festival marks a milestone in their ongoing pursuit of promoting peace in Mindanao.
The director, Arnel, explained "Hindi po ito pang turista. The movie should appeal more to Filipinos in order for them to be aware of what is really happening in Mindanao. This is our way of doing a wake-up call not only to the government but to all Filipinos. We should understand that in wars, civilians are caught in the crossfire, leading to dislocation, sickness, death."
He continues, "Personally, I'm glad that the government is in full support of the peace process in Mindanao.They are also supportive of projects such as this one. In fact, part of our funding came from the Philippines National Commission for Culture and Arts."
The 105-minute movie talks about the lives of refugees caught in the crossfire of an armed conflict. It follows trade partners Bai Magdas and Lingig who scavenge for rustic war remains and sells them to junk shop. Lingig, on one hand, has hearts for Bai Magdas' 16-year old daughter Bitoon, who looks for opportunity to work abroad but has turned to become victim of illegal recruitment. Bitoon then becomes the interest of rich Datu Mantukaw who feels old and desolate when he lost his family in armed conflict. The datu gives dowry when he proposes to Bai Magdas for marrying Bitoon.
"It is of simple plot multi-layered with social issues expressed in one story. It tells you of the small wars and institutional wars of these characters. It opens the audience's understanding on culture in Mindanao, say for arranged marriages. It also gives a different perspective on poverty and grief caused by wars," Arnel furthered on the key messages of the film.
The story of Bitoon, Bai Magdas, Lingig and Datu Mantukaw is undoubtedly captivating, paving the way for the jury's nods to include it in the Dubai International Film Festival Muhr Asia Pacific competition. It vied against two Oscar entries: Singapore's "Tsunami" by Eric Khoo and Turkey's "Once Upon A Time in Anatolia" by Nuri Bilge Ceylan. Other films in the category included Iran's "Good Bye" by Mohammad Rasoulof and "Final Whistle" by Niki Karimi, and Africa's "Restless City" by Andrew Dosunmu and "man on Ground" by Akin Omotso.
Critic or not, the film is a must-see for Filipinos. As Arnel concluded, "Filmmakers feel that they have social responsibility to examine the society, and provide options and solutions in making our society better. Since poverty is a recurring theme in the stories of our people, hence it recurs to our films. Nonetheless, Filipinos especially who are abroad should watch these kinds of films in order for them to witness and stay close to what really is happening in their homeland. Sana sa pagpanood nila ng Crossfire, maisip nila na aside from sending money to their families back home, meron pa silang pwedeng itulong at balikan sa ating bansa".
Illustrado Magazine-Gulf
The Magazine for International Filipino
Issue 58-Page 20
But more than just sharing the success of their projects, Fe and Arnel's concern primarily is the advocacy that they share together. The two independent filmmakers, who also produced films such as HOSPITAL BOAT and SHEIKA, are passionate in advocating peace in Mindanao, the Southern part of the Philippines, as well as promoting talents from there. Fe quips, "If other people are promoting their advocacies through songs, paintings or writings, we use films to create awareness in what we believe in."
Indeed, the presence of the film CROSSFIRE in this year's edition of Dubai International Film Festival marks a milestone in their ongoing pursuit of promoting peace in Mindanao.
The director, Arnel, explained "Hindi po ito pang turista. The movie should appeal more to Filipinos in order for them to be aware of what is really happening in Mindanao. This is our way of doing a wake-up call not only to the government but to all Filipinos. We should understand that in wars, civilians are caught in the crossfire, leading to dislocation, sickness, death."
He continues, "Personally, I'm glad that the government is in full support of the peace process in Mindanao.They are also supportive of projects such as this one. In fact, part of our funding came from the Philippines National Commission for Culture and Arts."
The 105-minute movie talks about the lives of refugees caught in the crossfire of an armed conflict. It follows trade partners Bai Magdas and Lingig who scavenge for rustic war remains and sells them to junk shop. Lingig, on one hand, has hearts for Bai Magdas' 16-year old daughter Bitoon, who looks for opportunity to work abroad but has turned to become victim of illegal recruitment. Bitoon then becomes the interest of rich Datu Mantukaw who feels old and desolate when he lost his family in armed conflict. The datu gives dowry when he proposes to Bai Magdas for marrying Bitoon.
"It is of simple plot multi-layered with social issues expressed in one story. It tells you of the small wars and institutional wars of these characters. It opens the audience's understanding on culture in Mindanao, say for arranged marriages. It also gives a different perspective on poverty and grief caused by wars," Arnel furthered on the key messages of the film.
The story of Bitoon, Bai Magdas, Lingig and Datu Mantukaw is undoubtedly captivating, paving the way for the jury's nods to include it in the Dubai International Film Festival Muhr Asia Pacific competition. It vied against two Oscar entries: Singapore's "Tsunami" by Eric Khoo and Turkey's "Once Upon A Time in Anatolia" by Nuri Bilge Ceylan. Other films in the category included Iran's "Good Bye" by Mohammad Rasoulof and "Final Whistle" by Niki Karimi, and Africa's "Restless City" by Andrew Dosunmu and "man on Ground" by Akin Omotso.
Critic or not, the film is a must-see for Filipinos. As Arnel concluded, "Filmmakers feel that they have social responsibility to examine the society, and provide options and solutions in making our society better. Since poverty is a recurring theme in the stories of our people, hence it recurs to our films. Nonetheless, Filipinos especially who are abroad should watch these kinds of films in order for them to witness and stay close to what really is happening in their homeland. Sana sa pagpanood nila ng Crossfire, maisip nila na aside from sending money to their families back home, meron pa silang pwedeng itulong at balikan sa ating bansa".
Illustrado Magazine-Gulf
The Magazine for International Filipino
Issue 58-Page 20
************
Writer-Director-Producer of CROSSFIRE Arnel Mardoquio with actor Perry Dizon being interviewed
CROSSFIRE Co-Producer and Gawad Urian Best Actress Awardee Fe Virtudazo-Hyde
with actor Perry Dizon
****
CROSSFIRE (2011) - a film review by: Karl M. Gaspar CSsr
CROSSFIRE (2011)
Direction and Screenplay:
Arnel Mardoquio
Arnel Mardoquio
Cinematography and Editing:
Arnel Barbarona
Arnel Barbarona
Musical Score:
Popong Landero
Popong Landero
Sound Design:
Maki Serapio
Maki Serapio
Production Design:
Bagwani Amplayo
Bagwani Amplayo
Art Direction:
Perry Dizon
Production Management:
Roland Victor C. Fortun
Perry Dizon
Production Management:
Roland Victor C. Fortun
Produced By:
NCCA (National Commission for Culture and Arts)
SineMindanaw
Skyweaver Productions
Red Motion Media
In cooperation with:
HYDEout Entertainment
Alchemy of Vision and Light Film and TV Productions
Misamis Oriental State College of Agriculture and Technology (MOSCAT)
LGU of Claveria, Misamis Oriental
LGU of Claveria, Misamis Oriental
Starring:
Perry Dizon as Datu Mantukaw
Alexis Libres as Lingig
Betya Villarojo as Bae Magdas
AC Macheca as Bitoon
Arnel Mardoquio, one of Mindanao's rising indie filmmakers, strikes gold once again with his latest film - Crossfire!! Perhaps Mardoquio is one of the very few Filipino filmmakers whose films have all been nominated for the Urian Best Picture award by the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino, the most distinguished award-giving body for films in the country today. Mardoquio's first three films - Hunghong sa Yuta (2008), Hospital Boat (2009) and Sheika (2010) - all competed for Urian's Best Picture.
There is no question that Crossfire will find itself again listed in the nominees of Best Picture for the next Urian awards. It is a stunning film, truly the work of a young filmmaker on the way to being recognized as a film master if he continues to sustain his artistic output characterized with a deep passion for independent filmmaking that never compromises in terms of mirroring the stark realities of our people's lives while illuminating the viewers' minds as to how we should interpret contemporary events towards being challenged to take part in seeking solutions to our societal problems.
Mardoquio's films - and Crossfire cements this reputation - invite us to enter into his interpretation of the current lifeworld of the disenfranchised segment of Filipino society. This is clearly the landscape of Mindanao; but it might as well be any other place in the country or any Third World nation where its original inhabitants have been reduced to a tragic situation owing to the colonization of their lifeworld by element of a system that creates disfunctionality among families, neighborhoods, clans, tribes and societies.
When this colonization leads to dirty wars which are played out in a broader national and global settings owing to the impact of globalization and geopolitical considerations, these disfunctionalities lead to the dehumanization even among the most gentle among us, namely, the indigenous peoples.
Bae Magdas (Betya Villarojo) and her daughter Bitoon (AC Macheca) are bakwits who left their homes within the Higaonon ancestral territory to relocate along with other kinsfolk to the safer grounds within the land owned by Datu Mantukaw (Perry Dizon). Owing to the continuing armed encounters between the government's armed forces and the rebels in the countryside which also happen to be the Lumad's (Mindanao's indigenous peoples) abode, the Higaonons are forced to evacuate their homes and farms to live in hamlets.
But there is no guarantee for full security in these hamlets which is why the homes have foxholes; in the event of a crossfire, the people seek shelter in these hiding places. At the center of this hamlet stands the big house of Datu Mantukaw where his kin - two wives and a number of children and other relatives - live. He is no longer the benevolent patriarch of this tribe. Forced by the conflict-ridden circumstances that has long pestered in their war-torn community, he has given up on being an authentic tribal leader. He had become a tribal dealer.
He deals in various schemes to make money. With his cow and a balsa, he operates a transport system for hire. He negotiates with all parties who needs favors from him. And he lends money. Hoping that their family might be liberated from poverty, Bae Magdas aims to have her daughter become an OFW. She borrows P20,000.00 from Datu Mantukaw to pay for the expenses involved in securing a passport and a job placement for Bitoon. Alas, in the end, Bae Magdas discovered that they were dealing with an illegal recruiter and Bitoon gets stuck in the conflict-affected area.
Pushed to the wall, Bae Magdas is pressured to conspire with Datu Mantukaw's lecherous plans over Bitoon. The elder Datu has been enamored by the young Bitoon and with the unpaid debt, he asserts his claim over Bitoon. Bitoon resists as she loves Lingig (Alexis Libres), an orphan who also lives in the hamlet.
Lingig is the constant companion of Bae Magdas as they scavenge the territory for the spoils of war. Dislocated from their ancestral domain, Lingig and Bae Magdas earn a living as scavengers. Despite being killed in the crossfire, they look for whatever they could find in places where encounters take place - arms, bullets and even folding beds used to carry wounded soldiers or rebels.
Interfacing with the lowlanders, Bae Magdas finds herself caught in the ideological conflict and both sides try to take advantage of her movement in the interior to serve as communications courier. Caught between her need to survive and to appease the Datu since Bitoon refuses to serve as a payment for the debt, Bae Magdas devices a plan that ends in tragedy as all armed forces - not just the AFP and the NPA, but even terrorist groups who also operate in the countryside as they hide those they have kidnapped - converge for a bloody show of force in what was once an idyllic spot in a Lumad ancestral home!
If film is primarily story-telling, Crossfire's plot is very engaging especially for those who refuse to waste their time seeing escapist films marketed purely for commercial purposes. Mardoquio's screenplay is lean and tight, its poetic resonance - especially at the film's beginning and end - enhances the flow of the story. But there is more to Crossfire than this plot. Following in the tradition of anti-war films, Mardoquio makes a statement for peace by telling a story that helps us to understand why there is need to end all kinds of dirty wars raging in a place like Mindanao. In the process, he also helps us to view our history as a nation; in Crossfire is a case study as to how our nation-state remains in a state of underdevelopment. For as long as the ordinary citizens like the Lumad are only seen as pawns to be used by those whose agenda is to hold on or to grab power - rather than as human beings whose rights are to be protected and whose needs are to be responded to - then we could never advance towards a society where there is fullness of life for everyone.
But Mardoquio's art is not didactic; so there is no moralizing as the film unfolds. Viewers can construct their own grasp of meanings through the film's language which is in itself quite powerful. Mardoquio is served well by his cast and crew in crafting a film that will be regarded as a gem in Mindanawon film industry in the decades to come.
More than in Mardoquio's three previous films, Crossfire's ensemble acting is truly impressive. Casting the actors for a film's roles is very crucial; it is said that once a film has the right cast in the choice of actors, close to two-thirds of the film is already in the can. The four main actors manifest powerful performances.
Perry Dizon and Betya Vilarojo do justice to their anti-hero roles. Both reveal in very nuanced performances how they deal with their inner demons even as they show that dehumanization has not totally claimed their souls. When Datu Mantukaw blurts to Lingig his lamentation as a father who have lost sons whom he offered to both sides of the camp, the viewer gets to have a glimpse of the inner torments. Very few actors have the gift to show such raw emotions.
Villarojo's Bae Magdas is of the Mother Courage (translated as Madonna Brava in a recent Tanghalan Pilipino production directed by Nestor Horfilla) archetype. Villarojo grapples with the role with a deep passion in the tradition of the best actresses in Filipino cinema, and runs away with it. In scene after scene - from facing the dangers of scavenging to sharing a meal in the Datu's house to intuiting the inevitable consequence of her betrayal - Villarojo proves that she is the actress to watch for in coming film productions.
Libres and Macheca - the film's young protagonists - are able to live up to the challenge of acting along with seasoned performers. Along with the rest of the cast - and for an independent film, Crossfire has a sizable cast given the need to show a whole village with farmers, bakwits, townspeople, armed groups including a terrorist group holding captives - they all respond positively to the director's adage that less is more. The film's achievement in acting is that there is hardly any room for melodramatic acting.
Mardoquio's technical crew is top-notch. Arnel Barbarona's cinematography is stunning; his camera captures the magnificent beauty of Mindanao's uplands with its lush greenery especially of forests bathed in mystical mist, the undulating hills washed by torrential rains and the silhouette of tall trees standing still with fiery sunsets at the background. The underwater scenes are also very striking, along with the quick movements of the camera covering war scenes.
Maki Serapio's sound recordings, Perry Dizon's art direction and Bagwani Amplayo's production design all contibute immensely to the film's outstanding over-all sound and look. Despite constraints in budget (always a challenge for independent filmmakers) as well as the weather realities (shooting time coincided with the unpredicted rains) the crew somehow were able to transcend the limitations and did a lot of improvisations.
Perhaps, it is in editing that viewers may have differences in opinions. Those preferring "real-time" pacing in films, would welcome Crossfire's occasional slow pace to experience how characters in the film exhaust their patience while waiting (as in the scene of Bae Magdas, Bitoon and Lingig waiting for the habal-habal to arrive). But others might find these scenes too slow and would prefer a tighter editing. It remains a challenge for the Director and Editor to deal with this problematic in a manner that does not compromise the film's over-all aesthetics.
Popong Landero's music has suited very well Mardoquio's film style and in Crossfire their collaboration reaches a higher level. The incorporation of his songs into a few key scenes of the film - including the love song to accompany the young lovers' tryst and the lamentation song that serves as backdrop while Lingig contemplates the memory of his dead relatives) highlight the emotions erupting in these scenes.
Unlike other struggling filmmakers, Mardoquio has had the advantage of finding the right people and groups to finance his filmmaking career. Four groups are credited as producers with four others providing the much needed additional assistance in the filmming and completion of Crossfire. Filmmaking has not made Mardoquio rich and there is still the possibility that he could not raise enough funds of his next film.
Which brings us to the major difficulty of sustaining Mindanao's nascent film industry. And in particular, to making sure that Mardoquio's films are both seen by as many Filipinos as possible and earn a margin of profit in the process. What good is a gem of a film if only a few could see it and is not able to recoup its costs?
Having shown through his four films that he is truly a film artist that we in Mindanao could be very proud of - with Crossfire as his best film so far - the cineaste hopes to view more of his films in the future. So it is imperative to develop a film audience who would patronize Mardoquio's films.
If Crossfire hits any local cinema in the near future, drop everything and go see it.
*****************************************
Credits:
Karl M Gaspar CSsr
Crossfire (2011) Facebook Fanpage: http://www.facebook.com/#!/crossfirefilm
Arnel Barbarona's channel on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/user/arbiche75
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