Thursday, December 27, 2007

"Death in the Land of Encantos" in Cinema Scope Magazine

Death in the Land of Encantos (Lav Diaz, The Philippines)

By Robert Koehler

Time, it’s on Lav Diaz’s side. “Malay time,” he said after the Toronto screening of his nine-hour-and-five-minute Death in the Land of Encantos. “I’m a Malay as much—maybe more—than I am a Filipino. We Malays are governed more by space and nature than conventional time.” What underlies the shattering and disturbing reality of Diaz’s new work is a stunning 2006 catastrophe: nature, in the form of the profoundly devastating Super Typhoon Durian, combined with the explosive power of the Mayon volcano, wiped out physical space—the Bicol region on the central island of Luzon—along with thousands of innocents. In the face of this, and in the experience of watching Death in the Land of Encantos from beginning to end, time itself dissolves. In fact, Diaz controls the sense of time to such a degree that it no longer matters. In his hands, we all become Malay.

This is just one of the paradoxes to ponder about Diaz’s cinema, which has helped frame—though not imperiously define—the new independent Filipino cinema over the past decade. In a group of relative youngsters, Diaz is the wise elder, and his work, starting with Batang West Side (2002), gave permission to a generation to radically question the precepts of an overwhelmingly crass and commercial film culture whose past rebels, like Lino Brocka, are so rare that they’re treated like mythical heroes.

Now that Raya Martin, John Torres, and the rest have come into their own—forming the most dynamic and daring national cinema anywhere—it’s thrilling to see Diaz graze deeper into his own Malay ecosystem, where viewer adaptation to local conditions is absolutely essential, where certain categories can be tossed out with the trash. This creates some vexing, even hilarious, situations as festivals don’t quite know how to classify and exhibit the wild and roaming Lav. In Venice, The Orrizonti jury gave Encantos a special prize, but Venice programmers had slotted it in Orrizonti’s documentary category, even though Encantos is emphatically not a documentary. Toronto programmed it in a comfy, small screening room where viewers could stretch out, have a small table for food, and co-exist with the movie for most of an entire day. But Toronto’s catalogue note tried to titillate with some bizarre nonsense about “a graphic, extended lovemaking session,” while the well-intended idea to include the film in the festival’s new “Future Projections” section was a mistake. Sure, one could wander into the Spin Gallery to catch some scenes (then wander back several minutes later and think you were watching the same scene, even though you actually weren’t), but the film was plainly not served well.

The only real way to be with Diaz’s cinema is to sit in a pitch-dark room, watch, and let the outside world peel and drop away. Besides, a genuine epic is being told. In Durian’s wake, a poet named Benjamin Agustan (Roeder Camanag) returns to his home village, Padang, to see if any family members survived and if there’s anything left to salvage. Significantly, Benjamin is a leftist poet, a victim of torture by ruthless state security police, an exile who has spent several years in Russia. He returns to a place of apocalypse and ghosts, where the landscape has become downright lunar and the few trees left are awkward sticks in the ground, but also where, amazingly enough, a pair of old artist friends—sculptor Catalina (Angeli Bayani) and fellow poet Teodoro (Perry Dizon)—are trying to continue to live and work.

Benjamin has to adjust and dial down from the metropolitan, civilized but also odd and dislocating life he’s led in Russia (“Russians,” he tells Teodoro, “are a strange race—they’re Europeans, and not Europeans”) to this utterly denuded and tragic world, in which one’s sense of home has been ripped out and tossed away. Benjamin’s poetic instincts are both fueled and burdened by the memories of past lovers; an ex-lover looks very real as she’s nude, lying on her bed, but recurring images also seem to make her into a spectre, while a strange nighttime Zagreb setting is the basis for thoughts of another lost love. (Here, Diaz does something that Torres specializes in, salvaging footage from another film—in this case, an unfinished short about Filipino ghouls adrift in Eastern Europe—using it for other purposes and altering its context.) Benjamin’s memories grow especially intense concerning his family, including a mother who had long ago gone insane.

As he had developed over the course of making Evolution of a Filipino Family (2004) and Heremias (2006), Diaz establishes concrete reality and facts alongside a nearly mystical state of mind that at first occupies and eventually permeates the work. This shift precisely tracks the filmmaking process. Encantos did indeed begin as non-fiction; the former reporter Diaz dashed to Bicol (where he made his previous two films) two weeks after Durian hit to record the environmental and human conditions. Clearly, although he hasn’t said such, he discovered an extraordinary stage expressing a cosmic tragedy that called for some kind of narrative. The typhoon’s actual victims speak to Diaz’s camera, but the fictitious characters inside Encantos speak and walk inside a patiently conceived deep focus mise en scène, like somnambulistic beings out of I Walked with a Zombie (1943). They have enough time and space to ponder many things: the existence of a deity, the state of their country, the alchemy between nature and art (Catalina explains that she makes her sculptures from Mayon’s lava, as a way of taming it), how mortal beings become ghosts (Catalina to Benjamin: “You’re like a ghost—you go away, and then you reappear”).

There are many examples of how Diaz manages this interpolation of the concrete and ineffable, but one in particular stands out so impressively that it becomes a signature effect. His fixed DV camera, shooting in wide angle to better encompass a massive landscape, runs for minutes, sometimes even over ten, until something happens: a figure in the far distance appears. When does it appear? I’ve watched this phenomenon since Evolution, and despite intense concentration, I can never spot the exact moment when the character materializes on screen. It’s a cinema viewing experience without parallel, exactly recreating what happens if one were to stand in a large landscape and wait for a person to arrive from the extreme distance.

Several scenes have Benjamin suddenly emerging within such a space, reinforcing Catalina’s remark. By the seventh and eighth hours of Encantos, Benjamin is trapped between this reality and Bicol’s shadow world. Camanag stumbles around in a near-dead stupour, buffeted by the loss of his family, his failed attempts to make sense of his mother’s madness, and his inability to stoke some sort of love with Catalina, collapses in a heap as if the air’s been sucked out of him. Art has the last word: Catalina recites a vivid, stark chunk of Benjamin’s verse (written by Diaz, proving that he’s a poet of the first degree) that brings him back to life. Even a closing flashback of Benjamin being tortured doesn’t detract from the poem’s efficacy.

With such declarative expressions of art, Diaz is encouraging the viewer to free-associate with a basket teeming with cultural—mostly Western—associations. It’s impossible to consider his awed shots of the perfectly conical and gorgeously intimidating Mayon, in combination with Benjamin’s gradual dissolution, and not think of Malcolm Lowry’s Under the Volcano. Just as it is to gaze upon the impossibly rocky landscapes over stretches of extended time and not recall L’avventura (1960). Then there’s Rilke, whose apt quote, “Beauty is the beginning of terror,” opens Encantos. Images of Pudovkin and Tarkovsky tumble into the mind when Benjamin and Teodoro discuss Russia. And then there are the two great poles of theatre history, that are here elegantly folded into each other: Aeschylus’ voice of personal and national tragedy in the form of lament and pure grief, and Beckett’s existential comedy, the endless wait for the thing that will never transpire. But the wait, the wait…the bliss in that wait, the physical stamp—exhaustion, giddiness, discomfort—felt by watching that wait is the special, new thing that Lav Diaz has brought.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

A LAV DIAZ TRIBUTE

Start:     Dec 28, '07 1:00p
End:     Dec 30, '07
Location:     Mogwai Cinematheque, Cubao X.
Mogwai Cinematheque presents:

A Lav Diaz Tribute

Mogwai Cinematheque will present Lav Diaz’s epic works

Ebolusyon ng Isang Pamilyang Pilipino (December 28),

Heremias (Unang Aklat: Ang Alamat ng Prinsesang Bayawak) (December 29),

and

Death in the Land of Encantos (December 30).

All screenings start at 1 pm.

Mogwai is located at Cubao X.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Noel Vera's Review of 'DEATH IN THE LAND OF ENCANTOS'

http://criticafterdark.blogspot.com/2007/11/kagadanan-sa-banwaan-ning-mga-engkanto.html
 

Kagadanan sa banwaan ning mga Engkanto (Death in the Land of Encantos, Lav Diaz, 2007)

Land of the dead

Lav Diaz's Kagadanan sa banwaan ning mga Engkanto (Death in the Land of Encantos, 2007) might be the possible result if you took Spike Lee's 2006 documentary When the Levees Broke, recast it in Andrei Tarkovsky mode, stretched it to Bela Tarr length, added a dash of Abbas Kiarostami-like meta-cinema, sprinkled it with a few ideas from Mario O'Hara, and set it in the Bicol region. Possible, though I wonder if said bastard offspring will be anywhere near as strange as this.

It's ostensibly the story of one Benjamin Agusan ('Roeder' in the film's credits, full name 'Roeder Camanag'), a famed poet gone into some kind of self-imposed exile in Kaluga, a small town southwest of Moscow (Lav calls it an inside joke on behalf of his father, who was fascinated by Russia; the country's literature and sensibility has seeped into many of his previous films (particularly Serafin Geronimo: Kriminal ng Baryo Concepcion (Serafin Geronimo: Criminal of Barrio Concepcion, 1998), his version of Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment)). He returns home to the vacation resort of Padang, near Legazpi City, in the wake of the devastation wreaked by Typhoon Reming (international name 'Durian')--a devastation made worse by typhoon-triggered lahar mudslides from nearby Mayon Volcano, burying homes and families alike (Padang was the worse-hit of the towns). He meets his friends Teodoro (Perry Dizon) and Catalina (Angeli Bayani), and is haunted by memories of former loves--Svita, a Russian beauty; Amalia (Sophia Aves), his longtime companion in Padang; his dead father, mother, sister.

It's an often seemingly shapeless, meandering tapestry, but Diaz is working on a vast canvas, five hundred and forty minutes long (his previous film Heremias Book One: The Legend of the Lizard Princess (2006) was about the same length; his Ebolusyon ng Isang Pamilyang Pilipino (Evolution of a Filipino Family, 2004) eleven hours long). Front and center on that canvas is Benjamin, the latest incarnation of one of Diaz's favorite characters, the restless wanderer--early examples included kidnapper-fugitive Serafin Geronimo (Raymond Bagatsing) and cuckolded husband Lauro (Joel Torre) in Hubad sa Ilalim ng Buwan (Naked Under the Moon,1999). Murder victim Hanzel Harana (Yul Servo) was a younger version seeking a family to belong to in Batang West Side (West Side Avenue, 2001); turns out Detective Juan Mijares (Joel Torre), the police officer investigating Hanzel's death, was a similarly lost soul. Reynaldo was an inscrutable figure entering and walking away from the lives of various families in Ebolusyon; the eponymous character in Heremias traveled in his oxcart full of handicrafts--alone, restless, almost entirely speechless, yet somehow able to give the impression that he was searching for something.

Benjamin, thought, unlike Reynaldo or Heremias is a poet as well as a wanderer. With Encantos Diaz has discarded the taciturn probinsyano (hick provincial) protagonist for the more loquacious small-town artist, the creative intellectual who chooses to live outside of Manila while practicing their craft. Which is something of a relief--the Diaz character is prone to long periods of contemplation and in an eleven or nine hour film (such as Heremias, Ebolusyon, and this), where they have little else to say between the long bouts of silence, it can sometimes make for difficult viewing. This time we have three verbose philosophers, able and willing to indulge in the one sport in which Filipinos demonstrate a natural, world-class ability to excel: the freewheeling discourse. Hamin (short for Benjamin), Teodoro, and Catalina gaze at the blasted landscape and hold forth on various subjects--love, art, death, God, the social and political condition of the Philippines, the difference between Filipinos and Russians, mosquitoes (even science-fiction writer Philip K. Dick and horror filmmaker David Cronenberg merit a quick mention). Diaz supplies all the dialogue, presumably; from personal experience I know him to be a world-class raconteur, able to talk to the wee hours of the morning on any subject imaginable. His extemporaneous monologue on pre-colonial Filipino sex in John Torres' Todo Todo Teros (2006) was a both illuminating and hilarious highlight of that film; here the skill provides enough meat to sustain the soul during our long journey through the film's narrative.

It helps that the film is full of poetry. Possibly taking a page from Mario O'Hara's masterpiece Pangarap ng Puso (Demons, 2000), where poetry and monsters haunted the imaginations of the protagonists, Diaz inserts verses here, there, and they function as lyrical commentary on and response to the film's themes and storyline (he had put poetry to memorable use once before, when Joel Lamangan gave an evocative reading of one of his pieces in Hesus Rebolusyunaryo (Jesus the Revolutionary, 2002)). Diaz at one point even has a kapre (a Filipino ogre) stalking his forest--you could almost imagine the creature wandering off from O'Hara's set and finding its way to Padang.

Sometimes the meandering nature of the discussions make for surprising turns, create startling connections. The three friends sitting in front of a lamp in utter darkness (it's night, and there's a brownout) talk about mosquitoes, how sliced raw onions sometimes drive them off, sometimes don't. Talk moves on to patterns in insect behavior, and Hamin tells of how writers and filmmakers seize on these patterns to tell postmodern stories of bizarre human activity (hence the mention of Dick, Cronenberg, and for good measure poet Ted Hughes). Catalina speaks out against such unfeeling fiction; she prefers to dwell in emotion and mystery. Talk shifts to the mysteries of the rosary, and how the Philippines seem to be mired in what rosary holders call a Sorrowful Mystery--the Death and Crucifixion stage, to be exact. Catalina's reply to this is a vow to tell the truth the best she can, through her art; Hamin asks (rather sardonically): is she willing to die for her art? Catalina sits and stares, not answering; the talk, having moved from evening dark to practical considerations to literary and cinematic themes, rose into a broad philosophical debate that peaked with a declaration of redemptive action, then with the mention of the ultimate darkness plunged back into the surrounding gloom (which, of course, is but a reminder of the larger gloom)--this being the shape of the film's past ten or so minutes.

Catalina often acts as foil, if not actual opponent, to Hamin's fatalism, her maternal and sexual life force countering his sense of despair. Against his insect behavior she responds with emotion and mystery; against his neglect of Amalia (who loyally cleaned and maintained his studio while he was in Russia, even insisted on speaking of him in glowing terms) she mischievously suggests that she'll mount an exhibit in tribute to the woman, displaying sculptures of Amalia's body parts, even private parts. There's sarcasm in Catalina's suggestion, but also something affirming: Amalia is gone, and this is a way of remembering her, keeping some portion of her vital, alive.

Against Mayon Catalina is all practical defiance; she acknowledges the volcano's beauty (it's considered the most perfect cone in the world), the same time she condemns the mountain for killing thousands of people over the years--is perhaps poised to kill thousands more (as Hamin notes, only one-fourth of the volcanic mud has been expended; the other three-fourths sits there, waiting for the next powerful typhoon). Knowledge of all that sludge waiting to bury her doesn't faze Catalina one bit; she just goes on working, taking mud from the volcano's slopes and using it for her sculptures, transforming it, taking material for potential death and giving it new life.

But the film's title speaks of death, not life; despite all of Catalina's (and Teodoro's, and Hamin's) artistic and creative powers, they can't stop Mount Mayon, or Typhoon Reming, or the Philippine government's more oppressive policies towards leftists (at one point it's mentioned that over 800 unarmed political activists have been killed since President Macapagal-Arroyo took power, a good portion of them Bicolanos). On a trip to Manila to find out what had happened to his mother (he knew she had died in a mental hospital, but didn't know the exact circumstances), Hamin again meets one of the paramilitary officers that had interrogated him, irrevocably changing his life (or so it seems).

As director Diaz shows more confidence in the black-and-white digital medium than he's ever shown before. He managed with a limited variety of lighting in Ebolusyon; in Heremias" he learned to create more expressive lighting schemes, sometimes even in inclement weather (weather he often created himself, using a water truck and fire hose). In this film he has sunlight waxing and waning as Catalina and Hamin talk in her outdoor studio (the light rhyming with the waning and waxing of the discussion); he has the three friends stage an entire debate (the aforementioned insect behavior patterns vs. emotion and mystery controversy) in the light of a single lamp; in Manila he has the camera sit low, like a political prisoner squatting on the floor, while it watches Hamin and his former torturer (their silhouettes vivid against the harsh Manila sunlight) talk about their past, present, future.

The last scene demonstrates an interesting series of directorial choices--why doesn't Diaz give us a clear look at Hamin's tormentor? Why does he allow the officer to play the role so melodramatically, like a low-budget action-movie villain? Was the conversation the event that triggered Hamin's suicidal downward spiral, or was it yet another symptom--a decisive one--of said spiral? Did Hamin imagine the whole encounter, this being his way of putting the blame on a concrete figure, his way of evading feelings of anger and grief and guilt at the apparent neglectful death of his mother?

The mother's departure from their home is a defining event in Hamin's life, and Diaz treats it as such with his camerawork. In a single shot the camera follows Hamin from behind as he walks up to a girl and boy playing among the trees, and we recognize the young Hamin playing with his sister Teresa; the man walks to the right, the camera following, till he's facing his childhood home. Suddenly a doctor in white coat emerges from the left of the house, pulling his mother along, walking past him. Hamin walks to the left, the camera panning to follow, just in time to catch both doctor and mother disappearing into the forest, then turns to look back at the home his mother left behind. This is Diaz's second foray into Jose Rizal territory, into the iconographic imagery of Rizal's famed novel Noli Me Tangere (Touch Me Not), his way in particular of evoking the figure of Sisa, the mother turned madwoman by the disappearance of her children and the tyranny of an unjust government. Diaz made this journey once before, with the story of Reynaldo's mother in Ebolusyon; fellow Filipino filmmakers Mario O'Hara, Lino Brocka, and Gerardo de Leon made the journey before him with their respective films (O'Hara's great Sisa (1998); Brocka's influential Tinimbang Ka Ngunit Kulang (You Were Judged But Found Wanting, 1974); De Leon's seminal Sisa and definitive Noli Me Tangere (1951 and 1961, respectively)). But where O'Hara, Brocka and de Leon's various Sisas were all helpless hysterics, singing folk songs when they weren't moaning after their missing children, Diaz's is the quieter kind, somehow kin to his gallery of wandering loners (you could say mother infected son with her temperament). She goes on to wander in and out of her son's consciousness, leading him to his inevitable fate.

Beyond all this, though--beyond the melodrama and dialogue--is Diaz's apparent relationship with the Bicolano landscape. In Ebolusyon and Heremias he seemed to disagree with the landscape, struggle against it, carefully angle his camera to capture the bleakest, least flattering aspect of an undeniably lush vista. Returning to the same region with Encantos (you might say the film is a sequel to the first two) the struggle has been resolved; Diaz's camera gazes at the treeless, houseless, blasted landscape with confidence, a sense of propriety, almost a sense of fulfillment. It's as if Diaz has discovered that the desolation left in the wake of Reming (with Mayon collaborating) is the perfect visual metaphor for the political and spiritual wasteland he feels was left in the wake of Philippine society (with the administration governing) in its downward spiral. This, Diaz seems to be saying to us, is the Philippines, nor are we out of it. One of the best--and most important--films to come out this year.


(First published in Businessworld, 11/27/07)

(Winner of a Golden Lion Special Mention at the Orizzonti (Horizons) Documentary Section of this year's Venice Film Festival)

"DEATH IN THE LAND OF ENCANTOS" - Reviews/Words/Film Comment from Slovenia, Venice


Lav Diaz's latest film, “Kagadanan sa Banwaan ning mga Engkanto” (Death in the Land of Encantos), winner of Orizzonti—Special Mention Award, the first Filipino film to bag a Mostra (Venice) prize.

Venice Film Festival (In Competition and Closing Film—Orizzonti) , Toronto International Film Festival (In Competition—Visions) , Ljubljana International Film Festival, Rotterdam International Film Festival 2008, Hong Kong International Film Festival 2008, Singapore International Film Festival 2008, FICCO 2008, Cinema du reel 2008 (part of a tribute to Lav Diaz)

Here are reviews and words of previous screenings in Venice and Slovenia .


From Slovenia (18th Ljubljana International Film Festival)

Danièle Huillet once notoriously remarked that cinephilia is also a lack of ambition. Presumably also with that warning in mind, Serge Daney later in his career as a film thinker redefined cinephilia (as it should be) as not just a relation to cinema, but a relation to the world through cinema. Cinema as perhaps the most complex and yet still straightforward means of human expression to understand or at least most accurately describe all the moral, social, political and aesthetical complexities of the worlds we inhabit and – more importantly – share. And it is with this understanding in mind that one should first approach and later ponder on Kagadanan sa banwaan ning mga Engkanto, the latest masterpiece (there really isn't any other word) by Lav Diaz, that most honest, hard working, heart wrenching, eye stunning and thought inspiring filmmaker at work today. Watching Kagadanan sa banwaan ning mga Engkanto thus surpasses a "mere" (nevertheless still absolutely unique) experience of cinema and becomes a fully fledged experience of life, an almost unbelievably sincere and courageous exploration into the heart of three grand existential matters: the meaning of love, the importance of hope, the redemptive power of art. All things of beauty--in a film of terrible beauty…

- - Jurij Meden, film critic, editor/Kino Magazine , Slovenia

Every new film signed by Lav Diaz means a celebration of film (as) art. In his latest adventure of images, gazes and words, Death in the Land of Encantos, he strokes again with enormous artistic power and unsurpassable poetic vision. He proved once more that art as such, irrespective of form it takes to realize its ideas, can be as dangerous weapon as any kind of firearms to fight against the terror of all kinds of oppression. His unique film expression, in which he took another large step forward to a new direction, is kind of experience that overshadowed great deal of filmmaking since Heremias. I can see or rather feel Death in the Land of Encantos as an invaluable gift, which will stay with me for a long time. At least because I'll be able to break trough all of the layers of its complex structure and countless meanings. Until then I'll enjoy the flashes of memories of this precious hours in film theatre, which flew too fast despite the contemplative rhythm of the narrative. Thus I could only reveal a deep debt of gratitude to get the chance to participate in such unique act of creativity and artistic responsibility.

- - Andrej Šprah, film publicist and writer from Ljubljana , author of several articles about Lav Diaz in Slovenia .

Nine hours were hardly enough. This experience was not just any kind of film experience. It could last 24 hours and it still wouldn't be enough. Because the story leads us into the land of prodigious thoughts, sometimes from everyday life, and rises up to the level of philosophy; in both instances, we were merged with ideas through elevated storytelling, which we are ravenously hungry of.

-- Petra Slatinšek , Slovenia


From Venice screening

Variety Review:

Lav Diaz's latest black-and-white digital marathon, "Death in the Land of Encantos " (clocking in at nine hours), unfolds in the devastated landscape left in the wake of Super Typhoon Durian, the worst storm to hit the Philippines in living memory. Placing a threesome of fictional characters amid the rubble, Diaz measures the aftermath of this natural disaster within the larger trauma of the islands' history. Plunging the viewer into an alternate time zone where distinctions between documentary and fiction, stasis and action slowly dissolve, pic confirms helmer's status as a brilliant but consummately non-commercial artist.

Unlike Diaz's other works, which were carefully constructed over time ("Evolution of a Filipino Family" was nine years in the making -- and 10 hours in the viewing), "Death" sprang fully grown from the ravages of the typhoon in Bicol, where Diaz had lensed several previous films. Thus, the documentary elements could not be described as "interpolated, " but rather form the very clay from which the drama (if such slight strands of narrative can be so termed) is molded.

Pic, with its themes of art and madness, is headlined with a quote from Rilke: "Beauty is the beginning of terror." Indeed, the region's Mayon Volcano -- which, under the onslaught of the storm, poured out mountains of rocks and debris, killed hundreds and buried whole towns -- remains one of the most majestic, perfectly cone-shaped structures in nature.

Pic traces fictional famed poet Benjamin Agusan (Roeder Camanag), newly returned to the Philippines from a lengthy stint in Russia . Two of his lifelong friends, a painter/sculptress (Angeli Bayani) and a fellow-poet turned farmer/paterfamilias (Perry Dizon) welcome Agusan home, and the trio starts to hang out together. The three, like everyone in the obliterated village of Padang , lost several close relatives to the natural calamity.

Specters from the past haunt the poet, including images of a beautiful naked woman who turns out to be the girlfriend he left behind who is now interred in his old studio lying somewhere beneath his feet.

Other visions haunting the poet are less explicable, like the nondescript street where the viewer finds himself stranded for stretches as Agusan stalks the Russian woman who left him after their child died. More disturbing still are scenes of his mother's psychotic breakdown and his father's desperate attempts to drive out the evil spirits with loops of twisted wire hung from trees. Madness stalks Agustan, as death and desolation lie over the land, the nude topmost branches of trees sticking up out of the ground where lush foliage once flourished. Diaz's stark black-and-white digital compositions frame a landscape so bleak and boulder-strewn, so empty of habitation that it is hard to believe the land was not barren from time primordial. Painful flashbacks to the region's past resurrect a lost Eden . The only thing more shocking than the extent of the damage is the ages-deep acceptance in the eyes of the survivors.

- -Ronnie Schieb, Variety, http://www.variety. com/review/ VE1117934956. html?categoryid= 31&cs=1


Film Comment:

There remains but one film to celebrate, among the greatest in Venice , and certainly the longest at nine-plus hours: Lav Diaz's monumental memoir to suffering, Death in the Land of Encantos , a modern mosaic cobbled together from the modest of means. In 2006, a typhoon devastated the region of the Philippines where Diaz shot much of his last two works--so the filmmaker went back and began filming, although with no clear game plan. Eventually he developed a narrative about a generation broken by their country's seemingly inescapable corruption: an assortment of the living dead wandering a landscape filled with the grief-stricken. Diaz's protagonist is yet another of the festival's schizophrenics, and manic-depressive in the bargain.

As in his 2005 Evolution of a Filipino Family, the filmmaker creates a massive tapestry, here incorporating documentary footage of typhoon survivor speaking out about government's neglect of their plight, as well as fragments from an unfinished short horror film shot in Zagreb in 2003. The latter concerns a lost tribe of Aswangs--ghouls of popular Philippine folklore--who have found a home in southeastern Europe . Little if anything at the Lido was as emotionally exhausting and exhaustive, as rich an experience and as crushing as Diaz's film.

-- Olaf Moller, Film Comment Magazine November-December 2007

Saturday, November 24, 2007

KONTRA-AGOS Resistance Film Festival

Start:     Dec 5, '07
End:     Dec 11, '07
Location:     Indie Sine, Robinson's Galleria
http://kontra-agos.blogspot.com/

Dec 5, Wednesday
OPENING NIGHT - FREE ADMISSION

Cocktails & Filmmakers' Potluck
7-7:30 PM
OPENING NIGHT PROGRAM
Lupang Hinirang:
Tao Aves with Anino Shadowplay Collective
Welcome Remarks:
Independent Filmmakers Cooperative
Kontra Agos Organizers
Special Guest Performance
8 PM
Premiere of WALAI by Jaja Adjani Arumpac
*Filmmaker will be present
9-11pm

Dec 6
Ehem!plo & The Singh Family Home Videos
1-3pm

Hilo
3-5pm

Voices, Tilted Screens
5-7pm

Shorts 1
*Filmmakers will be present
7-9pm

The Jihadist
*Filmmaker will be present
9-11pm

Dec 7
The Jihadist
1-3pm

Shorts 3
3-5pm

Walai
5-7pm

Shorts 2
*Filmmakers will be present
7-9pm

Standing Up
*Filmmaker will be present
9-11pm

Dec 8
Shorts 1
1-3pm

The Jihadist
3-5pm

Panel: On Human Rights and Artistic Freedom in

Philippine Cinema @ Philippine Cinema
5-7pm

Shorts 3
*Filmmakers will be present
7-9pm

Voices, Tilted Screens
*Filmmaker will be present
9-11pm

Dec 9
Shorts 2
1-3pm

Standing Up
3-5pm

Ehem!plo & The Singh Family Home Videos
*Filmmakers will be present
5-7pm

Hilo
*Filmmaker will be present
7-9pm

Shorts 1
9-11pm

Dec 10
Shorts 3
1-3pm

Voices, Tilted Screens
3-5pm

Shorts 1
5-7pm

Walai
7-9pm

Shorts 2
9-11pm

Dec 11
Standing Up
1-3pm

Ehem!plo & The Singh Family Home Videos
3-5pm

Shorts 2
5-7pm

The Jihadist
7-9pm

Shorts 3
9-11pm


SHORTS 1 – Mindanao shorts (Programmed by TENG
MANGANSAKAN)
7 PM December 6 (Filmmakers’ Reception), 3 PM December
8, 10 PM December 9, 1 PM December 10

ME’GUYAYA (Documentary)
By Eduardo C. Vasquez, Jr.,

Me’guyaya is a Te’duray term for merry-making or
thanksgiving. In 2003, an active and concerned group
of people in Upi, Shariff Kabunsuan initiated a
festival that would unite all residents in thanking
God for the abundant harvest. Since then, it has
become a big town event that celebrates the richness
and diversity of the Muslim, Christian and Lumad
peoples of Upi.

The documentary delves on how the Me’guyaya serves as
a catalyst for cultural unity as everyone gets
involved in the festivities.

TRANQUIL TIMES (documentary)
By Loren Hallilah I. Lao

The documentary delves on the good governance efforts
of the private sector, civil society and the local
government unit of Wao, Lanao del Sur working together
to erase remnants of the religious and ethnic clashes
of the 1970s. It explores how peace has been achieved
in this multi-ethnic town, propelling the
once-turbulent municipality into its present
agricultural renaissance.

GEORGE’S TOWN (Documentary)
By Moises Charles Hollite

George Sabandal is one of about 2,500 internally
displaced persons (IDPs) who have sought refuge in the
town of Buluan, Maguindanao as a result of the
“all-out war” in 2000. Refusing to go back to the
place of his origin, he has created a new life for
himself and his family in their ideal town.

SULU (Documentary)
By Al Jacinto

Born of a Muslim mother, young writer Arthur Sakaluran
Abasalo decides to visit Sulu despite the perceived
strife and presence of Muslim rebels and Abu Sayyaf
terrorists. In Sulu, he meets a former Muslim
rebel-turned policeman who tells him about his life
story and how he got separated from his family for
more than a decade. He returns to Sulu to start a new
life after being reunited with his family.

Arthur returns to Manila after a short stay in Sulu,
bringing with him memorable stories and truths about
the island feared by many as a dangerous place to go.

BINITON (Narrative)
By McRobert Nacario

A story depicting the process of preparation and
cooking of a dish called Biniton that is particular to
the community of Saniag, Ampatuan. The process of
cooking, in the eyes of an old woman, brings to life
the hardships they experienced amidst armed conflict
at the same time the process of preparation, through
the experience of Amel, her grandson walks us through
the current situation of their community. How amidst
the hardships and diversity in culture they had all
managed to bounce back and become united.

A STEP FOR MY DREAM (Narrative)
By Mona Labado

Seven-year-old Abdul dreams of becoming a leader of
his town. He has natural charisma and easily becomes
friends with people even if he hasn’t known them for
long. But his grandmother reminds him of their peasant
roots which is no match to the traditional ruling
family. Undaunted, Abdul sees it as a challenge
envisions his future.

DREAMS (Narrative)
By Sheron Dayoc

Nine-year-old Satra has been mute for as long as she
could remember. But her determination to secure a good
education reverberates clearly amid the strictures of
her Yakan culture.

SHORTS 2
Screenings: 7 PM December 7 (Filmmakers’ Reception), 1
PM December 9, 9 PM December 10, 4 PM December 11

A DAY IN THE LIFE OF GLORIA (animation/ 1 min.)
By RJ Mabilin

A satire on the different political and economic
issues the country faces under the Arroyo
administration.

THRESHOLD (experimental/ 15 mins.)
By Mikhail Red

Seeking the Threshold, the Wanderer, endures a dark
journey through the unknown and into the limits of the
human mind.

BINGO (documentary/ 16 mins.)
By Noriel Jarito

Bingo reveals life’s monotony of rural existence.
People embrace almost anything: dull, inspiring, tame,
untamed, reputable, and even deceptive. Their horizon
is bounded by beliefs which sometimes manage to
mislead, mock, and misuse their fate. They surrender
and never question the path they trace. Thus, they are
lost. Submission is sweet, to do otherwise is bitter.
Their incomprehension is at the maximum level that
wrong becomes right, and what is right becomes wrong.
To play “Bingo” inside a church is never questioned
and is labeled licensed by some unprincipled Catholic
Church leaders. Christianity is the largest religion
and surely many of its followers are destitute enough
to consider “Bingo” inside their church as a source of
momentary abundance.

Bingo reveals all: People are born. People are being
baptized. People marry. People die. All these should
have been valuable and symbolic, yet have gone awry
and worthless instead. Why? Because of people’s
shallowness and ignorance.

LUNES NG HAPIS (narrative/ 12 mins.)
By Nick Olanka

Virgie, an elementary school teacher, and Ismael, the
captain of the troop assigned to infiltrate the
rebels, are lovers in the midst of a military offense
in Filomena. Every Monday they meet and make love
passionately and violently. One day, due to the
disappearance of Virgie's student's father, she falls
into the situation to choose between her love for
Ismael and her love for her community.

DIVINE WIND (experimental/ 4 mins.)
By Sari Dalena-Sicat

A Japanese soldier hides in an island, in the belief
that the war has not ended.

UNCONVENTIONAL WARFARE (documentary/ 30 mins.)
By Herbert Docena and Anna Isabelle Matutina

This documentary contextualizes the issue of US
military presence in the country within the long and
bitter history of conflict in the south. Countering
the reductionist frame set by the narrative of the
“global war against terror,” it examines the
historical conditions that led to the emergence of the
Moro separatist movement and the subsequent rise of
the Abu Sayyaf. It dissects the government’s
contradictory attempts to downplay its threat while at
the same time justifying escalating military
operations in the region.

Against this backdrop, the documentary then probes
allegations of US military involvement in the war.

PUTOT (narrative/ 20 mins.)
By Jeck Cogama

Putot (Visayan for "small") is the heartfelt story of
a young boy growing up at a squatter colony by the
sea. Putot, aged 13, is a taciturn boy who takes care
of his mentally-ill father, and ekes out a living
selling mussels. He meets Mayang, a mysterious young
girl with secrets of her own. A friendship begins
between the two.

Shot on location near Manila Bay, this emotional story
premiered at the 2006 Cinemalaya Independent Film
Festival, where its director Emmanuel "Jeck" Cogama
won Best Director. Putot has been shown around the
world.

MENDIOLA (documentary/ 31 mins.)
By Sine Patriyotiko

Through the First Quarter Storm to Mendiola Massacre
to Calibrated Preemptive Response: from the very
start, Mendiola houses the eye of conflict. Fact is,
the road from Mendiola to the Palace is several
hundred meters away. Nevertheless, this still is a
great risk: to look directly at the center is to show
the strength to confront those in power. On the road
to Mendiola, one can tread across the history of our
continuous struggle for change.

SHORTS 3
Screenings: 2:30 PM December 7, 7 PM December 8
(Filmmaker’s Reception), 4:30 PM December 10, 9:30 PM
December 11

ANG BAYAN KONG PAYAPA (experimental/ 5 mins.)
By Elvert dela Cruz Banares

This is the state of our nation cycle.

SIMULA (experimental/ 11 mins.)
By Ruelo Lozendo

A worm enters a man’s ear and lives inside his body.
As the worm’s metamorphosis unfolds, the man
experiences his own transformation.
PUSHING THE PARAMETERS (documentary/ 27 mins.)
By Kodao Productions

2006 was the worst year for the members of the bar,
with seven lawyers and judges reportedly killed within
the year. A significant number of these lawyers are
directly involved in human rights advocacy. Under the
administration of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, 19 lawyers
and 12 judges were killed. And this can be seen in the
light of more than 850 victims of extrajudicial
killings from 2001 to 2007.

BINYAG (narrative/ 15 mins.)
By Mariami Tanangco

One night, two tragedies are about to take place. In
an abandoned warehouse, rookie policeman is tasked to
execute a suspected drug pusher. In the quiet suburbs,
a mother is worriedly waiting for her son to come
home. A social commentary on police-instigated
“salvaging” that was prevalent in the late 80s, the
film is intended as a personal elegy on lost
innocence.

RED SAGA (experimental/ 15 mins.)
By Gabriela Krista Dalena

Children of the Land faithfully guard the last harvest
from thieves. This poetic film offers a glimpse into
the passion and pain of the people's protracted war in
the countrysides.

MEDALAWNA (documentary/ 16 mins.)
By Apol Dating and Michael Cardoz

The story of a young girl named “Inday Liit” who helps
her family earn a living by happily sweeping
graveyards.

SA NGALAN NG TUBO (documentary/ 36 mins.)
By Tudla Productions

A video documentary that chronicles what happened on
November 16, 2004 when seven people died at the picket
lines of the Hacienda Luisita in Tarlac. Millworkers
and farm workers of the sugar refinery and plantation
owned by the Cojuangcos, one of the wealthiest, landed
families in the Philippines, went on strike. Their
demands were met with a volley of gunfire from
military and police. Beginning with the history and
background of the land issue, the film builds the
tension gradually, leading up to the actual footage of
the Hacienda Luisita incident, when even the filmmaker
holding the camera has to run for his life.

FEATURE LENGTH

WALAI (documentary/ 60 mins.) Opening Film – premiere
status
By Adjani Arumpac

Walai is an exploration of spaces.

It prods on the memories of four Muslim women who once
lived in the infamous White House in Cotabato City.
The documentary seeks narratives in “places...we tend
to feel without history.” It traces the past through
the women's experience of what has happened inside the
wrecked home—nostalgia and fear, loss and love, and
birth and death.

Screenings: 9 PM December 5 (Opening Film), 1 PM
December 7, 3 PM December 10, 8 PM December 11

THE JIHADIST (documentary/ 75 mins.) – premiere status
By Teng Mangansakan

The Jihadist is an autobiographical documentary on the
filmmaker’s struggle as an artist amid the backdrop of
the Moro revolution. His search for his rightful place
in the memory of his homeland yields questions that
require him to confront his identity as a Moro and
come to terms with his homosexuality.

Screenings: 9 PM December 6 (Filmmaker’s Reception), 5
PM December 7, 1 PM December 8

STANDING UP (documentary/ 155 mins.) – premiere status
By Waise Azimi

Standing Up is a feature length documentary young
Afghan men training to become professional soldiers in
the new Afghan National Army. Situated at the Kabul
Military Training Center, Standing Up chronicles the
struggles and lives of these Afghan men from the
moment they arrive at the KMTC to the last day of
training of their training. Extensive access to the
KMTC training program has provided an insiders
perspective into one of the most underreported and
important stories in the War Against Terror, the story
of those who are Standing Up to the first line of
defense.

Screenings: 9 PM December 7 (Filmmaker’s Reception),
3:30 PM December 9, 1 PM December 11

VOICES, TILTED SCREENS AND EXTENDED SCENES OF
LONELINESS: FILIPINOS IN HIGH DEFINITION
(experimental/ 100 mins.)
By John Torres

Voice, Tilted Screens is, at once, a meditation. It is
a meta-film that unravels a journey, a chronicle of
stories through foreign regions. It is a probing
letter from outside circles, an honest account of
illegitimate views from uneven terrain, and a
narrative-driven exploration of the nooks and
peripheries of the body, geography, and weather. As
the journey progresses, the film increasingly
traverses the countries of revelation, film, and heart
to where all journeys are meant to end with.

Screenings: 5 PM December 6, 9 PM December 8
(Filmmaker’s Reception), 7 PM December 10

(DIFFERENT) WAYS AND MEANS
SUB-PROGRAM

HILO (experimental/ 90 mins.)
By JP Carpio

Originally conceptualized as a short film shot in 2004
and completed nearly three years later as a
full-length, the film charts the various emotional
courses during a dinner between Emerson, a university
professor, and Jenny, a university student.

Screenings: 1 PM December 6, 6:30 PM December 9
(Filmmaker’s Reception)

THE SINGH FAMILY HOME VIDEOS (documentary/ 40 mins.)
By Emman dela Cruz

A documentary work in progress, "The Singh Family Home
Videos" charts an intimate look at the family life of
the filmmaker's neighbors, a Punjabi Indian family who
has assimilated into the Filipino culture and
community. Is nationality a matter of origin? Is
identity a matter of choice? Or is your "home" a
matter of where you are or where you'll be?

Screenings: 1 PM December 6, 6:30 PM December 9
(Filmmaker’s Reception), 6:30 PM December 11

EHEM!PLO (documentary/ 43 mins.)
By Clodualdo Del Mundo, Jr.

‘Lahat tayo ay nawawalan,’ says Heidi Mendoza, a
conscientious auditor featured in this EheM!Plo
video-documentary. ‘It is because of corruption that
there is poverty,’ argues former Ombudsman Simeon
Marcelo. They are correct. Corruption ruins our
democratic institutions – tempting many to be angry
and hopeless. Young people, like Melonie Maglia of
Ifugao, are longing for leaders with conscience and
competence, not public officials who, according to Fr.
Vhong Navarro, invent projects for selfish interest.
Mayor Jesse Robredo and Allen Reondanga of Naga City
prove that good examples do exist. They employ
I-governance and community participation in their
struggle to uplift the condition of the Bicol region.

EheM!Plo shows that indeed corruption is violence. If
this is trure, then stopping corruption and spreading
integrity are now the new ways of working for peace.

Screenings: 1 PM December 6, 6:30 PM December 9
(Filmmaker’s Reception), 6:30 PM December 11

OTHER KONTRA-AGOS EVENTS:

8 December, Saturday, 5-7 PM
PANEL DISCUSSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS AND ARTISTIC FREEDOM
IN PHILIPPINE CINEMA
FREE ADMISSION

PHOTO EXHIBIT AT THE LOBBY courtesy of the FREE JONAS
BURGOS MOVEMENT

Kontra-Agos Resistance Film Festival is an Initiative
of ST Exposure and Digital Cheese in cooperation with
UP Sining at Lipunan and the Independent Filmmakers
Cooperative. Visit www.kontra-agos.blogspot.com. For
inquiries about the festival write to
kontra_agos@yahoo.com

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Premiere of Lav Diaz' 'DEATH IN THE LAND OF ENCANTOS'

Start:     Nov 29, '07 10:00a
Location:     UP Film Center (Cine Adarna), UP Diliman
"DEATH IN THE LAND OF ENCANTOS"
Venice Film Festival Special Award Winner

Cast: Roeder Camañag, Perry Dizon, Angeli Bayani and Ronnie Lazaro

CAM one, CAM all!

UP Cinema As Art Movement (UP CAM) invites all of you to the premiere
of Lav Diaz' "Death in the Land of Encantos", a 9-hour film from the man
behind "Ebolusyon" and "Batang West Side".

November 29 is the date(Thursday) . Screening will start at 10:00am in
the UP Film Center, also known as Cine Adarna, in UP Diliman.

Tickets will be sold at 100 pesos. (Not bad for a 9-hour film eh?)
Don't miss this very special event. See you there!

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

SIGNATURE

Start:     Nov 17, '07 8:00p
End:     Nov 18, '07
Location:     Dance Forum, 36E West Avenue, Quezon City
A Dance Forum production in cooperation with Airdance and The Lemon Circle Event Management and Consultancy

SIGNATURE

Signature features works that have the respective dance artist's undeniable stamp - dance with a highly personal artistic vision.

In celebration of performance venue Dance Forum’s instrumental role in defining independent dance practice in the Philippines, “Signature” will be staged there on Nov. 17 and 18.

To be showcased are contemporary dance artists Myra Beltran and Paul Morales in signature pieces as well as the works of the winners of the recently concluded Wi_fi Body Festival's New Choreographers Competition, the first choreography competition for the solo-duet form in the Philippines.

An alternative, intimate and open-air performance venue, Dance Forum was founded by Beltran in 1995. She is a leading figure in Philippine independent dance, conceptualizing and leading the World Dance Alliance-Philippine s Choreographers' Network in the groundbreaking Contemporary Dance Map Series and the Wi_fi Body Festival at the Cultural Center of the Philippines that has supported choreographers and dancers in the independent contemporary dance scene in the Philippines.

“Ten years ago, Dance Forum opened publicly,” said Beltran. “At that time, independent dance practice in the Philippines necessarily had to be contemporary in approach and aesthetic. The direction has subsequently developed in many branching streams, but the idea of the solo dance, and all its political implications in the history of dance, is an important step in any ground-breaking dance movement. We want to celebrate and commemorate that idea all over again.”

Working through the birthing pains of establishing the idea of “solo artist” or “solo dance,” Beltran has successfully laid the foundations for the understanding and appreciation for this performing art form. “Now I can proudly say that the idea stands on solid ground and that, as a matter of fact, it is a privilege to do solo dance work,” she said. “This ‘rebellion,’ this ‘signature’ is what we want to celebrate – a celebration of the spirit that opened up Dance Forum to house independent contemporary dance, with a new generation of artists carrying on the practice.”


Dates: Nov. 17 and 18, 2007 8pm

Venue: Dance Forum, 36E West Avenue, Quezon City (across the street from Facial Perfect Salon). Map available for downloading at www.mbeltrandancefo rum.com


Featured dancer/choregrapher s:

Myra Beltran

Paul Morales

Ava Maureeen Villanueva

Herbert Alvarez

Nina Hayuma Habulan

Jethro Pioquinto

Elena Laniog

John Philip Martir


Ticket price: P150.00 only

For details and reservations:

Website: www.mbeltrandanceforum.com

Email: danceforum.mb@gmail.com

Telephone: 373-2946 and 373-2947

Cell: 0917-5219227


Publicity and promotions for Signature is provided in part by The Lemon Circle Event Management and Consultancy (thelemoncircle@ yahoo.com) .

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

French producer: Filipinos are the best - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/entertainment/entertainment/view_article.php?article_id=93093
French producer: Filipinos are the best

By Bayani San Diego Jr.
Inquirer
Last updated 11:59pm (Mla time) 10/07/2007

MANILA, Philippines -- Without thinking twice, French producer Henri de Lorme asserts that the Filipino cast of the QTV comedy show “Camera Café” tops his list.

De Lorme was co-producer of the five-minute French sitcom which has been spun off in at least 30 countries—including Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Italy, Spain, Greece, Ukraine and Yugoslavia. He is now the franchise holder for Asia.

“I’ve been to a lot of countries [and] seen the different versions. But, for me, the best is the Pinoy cast,” De Lorme tells Inquirer Entertainment in an exclusive interview. “The Filipinos are even better than the original French cast—who are my friends!”

Filipinos are natural entertainers, explains the French TV exec. “They can do everything: sing, dance, act. It’s ingrained in the culture.”

Director Mark Meily is all praise as well for his 17-strong ensemble, which includes seasoned performers Jaime Fabregas and Joy Viado, as well as drama actresses Angel Aquino and Assunta de Rossi, the comic tandem of Bearwin Meily and Jojo Alejar and fresh talents Tado Jimenez, Patricia Ismael, LJ Reyes, Arnold Reyes and Monica Llamas.

“Show creator Alain Kappauf and Jean Yves Robin of CALT (overall franchise holder) saw our version and were so pleased with it, they want to co-produce other CALT programs for the Philippines,” says Meily.

To think that the Pinoy cast had to go through the wringer while taping the show’s first season.

Ismael recalls that it wasn’t uncommon for them to memorize 28 scripts and tape 10 episodes a day.

Alejar admits, “Memorization is my waterloo. But Direk Mark was very patient with me.” Alejar says that he had to shape up because the script required precision. “We were not allowed to ad-lib because we depended on each other for our cues.”

Time limit

“There was a timer on the set. We couldn’t go over the time limit (three and a half minutes),” De Rossi points out. “Unlike in other shows, where the punch line sometimes gets lost in the ad libs, our show is more direct to the point. It’s quick and funny.”

Aquino compares the experience to live theater. Jimenez agrees, saying that a lot of time was spent on “rehearsals.”

“We couldn’t afford to make a mistake because we’d have to start from the top if we did,” says Llamas.

Another challenge, says petite comic Ismael, was the show’s one-camera set-up. “There’s only one camera angle. Since I’m vertically challenged, sometimes only my bumbunan (top of my head) can be seen in the frame. It’s because the other actors are so tall!”

Seriously now. Is the Pinoy audience ready for the bite-size, snack entertainment offered by “Camera Café” (which debuts on QTV on Oct. 15)?

“Today’s viewers have a short attention span. Hopefully, Pinoys will give the show a chance,” Meily says.

De Lorme is optimistic, insisting that the French and Pinoys have the same quirky sense of humor.

“We have the same spirit,” De Lorme says. “The Filipino scriptwriters quickly understood the show’s concept. I think the scripts written by the Filipinos are even better than some of the French originals.”

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

CAMERA CAFE!!!

Start:     Oct 15, '07
COMING SOON! Abangan!

WATCH A rich blend of Pinoy and French* humor in a 5-minute comedy show!

Kakaiba siya! “Camera Café” ang tawag sa kanya. Nangyayari ang lahat ng
kabalastugan sa point of view ng coffee machine.

Saan ipapalabas? Sa QTV 11. Kelan? Simula October 15, 2007 (10 a.m.
muna, tapos replay ng 1:45 pm tapos 8 pm) pero ang regular time slot ay ito:
Monday to Friday 8 pm (new episode), 10 am and 1:45 pm (next day replay).

(teka . does that mean may saturday show? o sa monday yun? hmmm...)

Bakit daw kabago-bagong show, may replay na? Why? Coz you can’t get Enough of cam café! Kung sa meals dapat 3x a day, ang cam café dapat 3x a day din! Parang coffee break.

Atsaka…

Commercials lang ba ang may karapatang ireplay nang ilang beses sa isang araw? Bakit hindi ang CAM CAFÉ? Music video lang ba ang inuulit-ulit? Bakit hindi ang Cam Café? We need to laugh more than 3x a day!

Actually …

kasi sa sobrang iksi ng 5 minutes, baka magtimpla ka lang ng kape (o mag-CR) e ma-miss mo na ang show. But have no fear! Replays are here!

Kaya’t… WATCH CAMERA CAFE MONDAYS TO FRIDAYS, A new episode at 8pm, replays the next day at 10 am and 1:45 pm. MANOOD KA!

Not only for people with a short attention span.



*Camera Café is a comedy show that originated from France, but we’ve adapted their characters to Pinoy sensibilities. First stop-over of the Asian franchise is the Philippines.

director: Mark Meily

writers: Rey Agapay, Dennis Teodosio, Vincent de Jesus, Rody Vera, Liza Magtoto

starring: Bearwin Meily, Jojo Alejar, Christian Vasquez, Assunta de Rossi,
Jaime Fabregas, Joy Viado, Patricia Ismael, Sherilyn Reyes, Kalila Aguilos,
Noel Colet, Gerry Montes, LJ Reyes, Monica Llamas, Arnold Reyes, Vince de
Jesus, Tado, and Angel Aquino.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Death in the Land of Encantos Review - Variety.com

http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117934956.html?categoryid=31&cs=1
Venice
Death in the Land of Encantos
Kagadanan sa banwaan ning mga engkanto (Philippines)
By RONNIE SCHEIB

A Produksyung Sine Olivia production in co-production with Hubert Bals Fund. (International sales: Produksyung Sine Olivia, Quezon City, Philippines.) Produced, directed, written, edited by Lav Diaz.

With: Roeder Camanag, Perry Dizon, Angeli Bayani, Dante Perez, Sophia Aves, Gemma Cuenca.
(Tagalog, some English dialogue)

Lav Diaz's latest black-and-white digital marathon, "Death in the Land of Encantos" (clocking in at nine hours), unfolds in the devastated landscape left in the wake of Super Typhoon Durian, the worst storm to hit the Philippines in living memory. Placing a threesome of fictional characters amid the rubble, Diaz measures the aftermath of this natural disaster within the larger trauma of the islands' history. Plunging the viewer into an alternate time zone where distinctions between documentary and fiction, stasis and action slowly dissolve, pic confirms helmer's status as a brilliant but consummately non-commercial artist.

Unlike Diaz's other works, which were carefully constructed over time ("Evolution of a Filipino Family" was nine years in the making -- and 10 hours in the viewing), "Death" sprang fully grown from the ravages of the typhoon in Bicol, where Diaz had lensed several previous films. Thus, the documentary elements could not be described as "interpolated," but rather form the very clay from which the drama (if such slight strands of narrative can be so termed) is molded.

Pic, with its themes of art and madness, is headlined with a quote from Rilke: "Beauty is the beginning of terror." Indeed, the region's Mayon Volcano -- which, under the onslaught of the storm, poured out mountains of rocks and debris, killed hundreds and buried whole towns -- remains one of the most majestic, perfectly cone-shaped structures in nature.

Pic traces fictional famed poet Benjamin Agusan (Roeder Camanag), newly returned to the Philippines from a lengthy stint in Russia. Two of his lifelong friends, a painter/sculptress (Angeli Bayani) and a fellow-poet turned farmer/paterfamilias (Perry Dizon) welcome Agusan home, and the trio starts to hang out together. The three, like everyone in the obliterated village of Padang, lost several close relatives to the natural calamity.

Specters from the past haunt the poet, including images of a beautiful naked woman who turns out to be the girlfriend he left behind who is now interred in his old studio lying somewhere beneath his feet.

Other visions haunting the poet are less explicable, like the nondescript street where the viewer finds himself stranded for stretches as Agusan stalks the Russian woman who left him after their child died.

More disturbing still are scenes of his mother's psychotic breakdown and his father's desperate attempts to drive out the evil spirits with loops of twisted wire hung from trees. Madness stalks Agusan, as death and desolation lie over the land, the nude topmost branches of trees sticking up out of the ground where lush foliage once flourished.

Diaz's stark black-and-white digital compositions frame a landscape so bleak and boulder-strewn, so empty of habitation that it is hard to believe the land was not barren from time primordial. Painful flashbacks to the region's past resurrect a lost Eden. The only thing more shocking than the extent of the damage is the ages-deep acceptance in the eyes of the survivors.

Camera (B&W, DV), Diaz; music, Diaz; production designer, Dante Perez; sound, George Vibar, Laurel Lee Penaranda. Reviewed at Venice Film Festival (Horizons), Sept. 8, 2007. (Also in Toronto Film Festival -- Visions.) Running time: 538 MIN.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Tanghalang Pilipino's MULAN

Start:     Sep 14, '07
End:     Oct 7, '07
Location:     Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino (CCP Little Theater), Cultural Center of the Philippines, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
In MULAN, wars are fought not just by men but between the gods. Set in ancient China, MULAN tells the story of the bravery and courage of the legendary character Hua Mulan, the heroine who joined an all-male army described in a famous Chinese poem known as the "Ballad of Mulan". The production showcases spectacular and innovative staging techniques, and features a brilliant choreography that fuses elements of martial arts and original music inspired by Oriental traditions.

This new musical is perfect for children and young people of all ages, musical theater enthusiasts and for those who simply want to get in touch with their Asian roots.


CAST

MULAN Mayen Estañero

JADE EMPEROR Jonathan Tadioan

EMPRESS WANG MU Marjorie Ann Lorico

HUA HU Sugus Legaspi

JI LI Kathlyn Castillo

COLONEL YU Chromewell Cosio

XIANGLAN Jennilee Chuaunsu

JULAN Anna Deroca

MADAM SUN Wenah Nagales

CHING EN LAI Riki Benedicto

MENSAHERO Bong Cabrera

KOMADRONA Sheenly Gener

MGA KAWAL / TAUMBAYAN Susan Decena, Carlos Deriada, Jorge Amparado, Russell Legaspi, Tara Cabaero, Nar Cabico (understudy)



ARTISTIC & PRODUCTION STAFF

DIRECTOR Dennis N. Marasigan

LIBRETTIST Rody Vera

MUSIC Jed Caballero Balsamo

PRODUCTION DESIGNER Gino Gonzales

CHOREOGRAPHER Denisa Reyes

MAKE UP DESIGNER Dennis Tan

LIGHTING DESIGNER Jonjon Villareal

SOUND DESIGNER Jethro Joaquin

PRODUCTION MANAGER Minette Palcon

STAGE MANAGER Ma. Kristine Chynna Roxas

ASSISTANT STAGE MANAGERS Ed Lacson, Max Celada


September 15, 16, 22, 23, 29, 30, October 6, 7, 2007 3:00 P.M.
September 14, 21, 28, October 5, 2007 8:00 P.M.


Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino (CCP Little Theater)

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Saturday, August 4, 2007

“PILIPINAS CIRCA 1907” OPENS TANGHALANG PILIPINO’S POWERFUL NEW SEASON

Start:     Aug 10, '07
End:     Sep 2, '07
Location:     Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino, Cultural Center of the Philippines, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
The landmark sarswela by Dr. Nicanor G. Tiongson is revived in a new production as Tanghalang Pilipino’s 21st theater season opener. “PILIPINAS CIRCA 1907” will run at the CCP Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino from August 10 to September 2, 2007. The production, set in the period prior to the national elections in 1907, tells about political conflict and family relations getting in the way of two pairs of star-crossed lovers when America was more in the heart.

Leading the remarkable cast are two of Manila’s finest sopranos alternating as Leonor, Ana Feleo and Lani Mabilangan Ligot. Theater’s most beloved leading men, Arnold Reyes and Miguel Castro, alternate as Leonor’s lover, the poet-journalist Emilio. Classical singer Nazer Salcedo and Tanghalang Pilipino Actors’ Company member Bong Cabrera alternately play Andres, the supervisor of the family’s tobacco factory. Alternating as Pura, Andres’ object of affection, are Aliw Best Supporting Actress nominee, Wenah Nagales and Sugar Hiccup lead vocalist Jeanette Reyna. The bane to the star-crossed lovers is Don Pardo, played by character actor Dido dela Paz, the Federalista who’s at political odds with his family. Doña Pilar, the family matriarch, is alternately played by Mia Bolaños and Clotilde Lucero. Veteran actor Lu Veloso and comedian Garry Lim lend their comic talents as the balikbayan trumpet player Porong. Also in the cast is Andrew Cruz and Bong Embile (Juan/Pedro) , Eric dela Cruz and Roeder Camañag (Robert), Jean Judith Javier (Dorothy), and the Tanghalang Pilipino Actors’ Company.

The libretto is by Nicanor Tiongson, with music by Lutgardo Labad, Louie Pascasio, Chino Toledo, Lucien Letaba, Nicanor Abelardo, Scott Joplin and Barry Fagan. Musical direction is by Chino Toledo, with production design by Leo Abaya. Notable fashion designer, Danilo Franco, creates fabulous ternos for the production. Legendary Dance artist Edna Vida Froilan provides the choreography while Barbie Tan Tiongco handles technical direction. At the director’s helm is Dennis Marasigan. The production is his first directorial assignment with Tanghalang Pilipino after assuming the company’s Artistic Director seat. He also doubles as the production’s lighting designer.

“PILIPINAS CIRCA 1907” has all the elements that made the sarswela very popular with audiences – love between gallant heroes and beautiful heroines, poignant solos and lavish choruses, comic songs and characters, period manners and domestic situations. But more than these, “PILIPINAS CIRCA 1907” also has contemporary themes – politics and tradition, human tragedy and conflict, and the search for realistic solutions – that make a point for today while retaining the sarswela’s old charms. This production caters to all ages and persuasions, but more specifically for music theater enthusiasts and students of Philippine history, literature, political science, and humanities. And plain old romantic lovers, too.

“PILIPINAS CIRCA 1907” is generously supported by Tesoro's, artonedesign, Flowerline, Jam 88.3, Wave 89.1, Magic 89.9, 99.5 RT and Heart 103.5.

For details, bookings, reservations and ticket inquiries, please call Tanghalang Pilipino at 832-3661, Ticketworld at 891-9999, or the CCP Box Office at 832-3704.

La Biennale di Venezia

http://www.labiennale.org/en/cinema
"Death in the Land of Encantos", Lav Diaz's new work, is the Closing Film of the Orizzonte section of the Venice Film Festival. It is also In Competition in the same section.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Lav Diaz's DEATH IN THE LAND OF ENCANTOS

The Philippines’ Lav Diaz won the Special Mention Prize in the Horizons (Orizzonti) Documentary section of the 64th Venice International Film Festival for his nine-hour entry, “Kagadanan sa Banwaan ning mga Engkanto (Death in the Land of the Encantos).”



INQUIRER EXCLUSIVE
Brad Pitt ‘stunned’ by Venice Best Actor win

By Ruben V. Nepales

Inquirer
Last updated 08:28pm (Mla time) 09/11/2007

TORONTO, Canada—“I was stunned.”
 
That was his reaction, Brad Pitt told this reporter, when he received the news that he had won the Best Actor award in the 64th Venice Film Festival for his performance in “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.”
 
Pitt is here for the Toronto International Film Festival, where the same film is an entry.
 
The actor got the call from his producing partners who were in Venice for the awards night ceremonies just before his scheduled interview with this reporter’s group, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.
 
Pitt, who won for his portrayal of America’s most famous outlaw, said he was with his partner, Angelina Jolie, when the call came through.
 
He recounted: “My first reaction was, ‘Huh?’ I did not expect it. It’s a great honor … to be part of the list of actors who won … I’m still processing this.”
 
Pitt expressed elation at Cate Blanchett’s Best Actress prize for portraying Bob Dylan in the bold, experimental “I’m Not There,” which shared the Special Jury Prize with “La Graine et le Mulet.”
 
He said his triumph was especially rewarding since “The Assassination,” written and directed by Andrew Dominik, was plagued by production problems and delays and took three years to make.
 
Casey Affleck, who plays Robert Ford, said of his co-star’s victory: “It’s a well-deserved honor for Brad. He really put himself in the hands of Andrew. He could have said, ‘I can do this on my own.’ But he submitted himself as a ‘puppet’ of Andrew in the best possible sense of the word. He gave another dimension to Jesse James.”
 
Dominik said, “I am thrilled for Brad. Directing him and this movie was like playing cowboys and Indians but on a more sophisticated level.”
 
Ang Lee duplicated his Venice triumph two years ago for “Brokeback Mountain.” The Chinese director’s “Lust, Caution” won the Golden Lion top prize award.
 
The Philippines’ Lav Diaz won the Special Mention Prize in the Horizons (Orizzonti) Documentary section of the festival for his nine-hour entry, “Kagadanan sa Banwaan ning mga Engkanto (Death in the Land of the Encantos).”

Brian De Palma was declared Best Director for “Redacted,” a drama on the Iraq conflict.

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www.labiennale.org/en/cinema

Lav Diaz competes in the Venice Int’l Filmfest

By RICKY LO
The Philippine Star

 
We haven’t heard from Lav Diaz in ages, haven’t we?
 
The "eccentric" director, who once dismissed entries in a Metro Filmfest as "stupid," has not only beaten lung cancer but also his colleagues to the 64th Venice International Film Festival (VIFF) in Italy which is listed as one of the Top 10 prestigious filmfests in the world.
 
Yes, Lav’s new film, Kagadanan sa Banwaan ning Mga Engkanto (Death in the Land of the Enchanted), is competing in VIFF which will run from Aug. 29 to Sept. 8. Kagadanan will also be the closing film of the Orizzonti Section of the filmfest.
 
This piece of good news was relayed to this corner by Funfare’s "international correspondent" Ferdinand Lapuz who is now in Toronto to prepare for the filmfest there in September and to cover the shooting of Echo, the Hollywood remake of Regal Films’ Sigaw by Yam Laranas who’s also directing Echo. Lapuz will do a diary-style story about Iza Calzado who’s starring in Echo with Jesse Bradford (Flags of Our Fathers) and Scottish actress Louise Linton.
 
Here’s an excerpt from the letter of invitation from Marco Miller, VIFF director, to Lav and Vanja Kaludercic, producers of the film retitled (for the VIFF) Death of the Poets (of which Lav is the scriptwriter, cinematographer and editor):
 
Dear Lav Diaz and Vanja Kaludercic,
 
I am happy to confirm that the film Death of the Poets by Lav Diaz is invited to the Orizzonti Section of the 64th Mostra Internazionale d’Arte Cinematografica, to be held in Venice from August 29th to September 8th, 2007. The film will be premiered as part of the Orizzonti Competition and it will be screened as Closing Film on Saturday, September 8th.
 
Please note that the participation of the film in the Official Competition of the Mostra requires that the film will be presented in Venice as a world premiere... and that you will fill in the entry-form
 
I thank you for your cooperation and for contributing to the success of the 64th edition of the Mostra with the participation of your films.
 
I will be happy to welcome you all in Venice.
 
Best regards,
— MARCO MILLER
Director
 
Only two other Filipino films have so far competed in the VIFF, Manuel Conde’s Genghis Khan (which inspired a Hollywood movie) in the ’50s and Jeffrey Jeturian’s Tuhog in 2002.
 
Kagadanan was shot in Bicol and partly in Pila, Laguna, on a budget (including post-production work) of P500,000. Its running time is eight hours like Lav’s other film, Heremias Part 1. His previous films include Ebolusyon ng Pelikulang Pilipino, 11 hours; and Batang Westside, five hours, which was also shown in filmfests in Europe.
 
Kagadanan features a cast of non-stars, namely Roeder Camanag, Perry Dizon, Angeli Bayani, Sophia Aves and Gemma Cuenca.
 
Lapuz added in his report: "The 64th edition of the VIFF will be articulated according to the established outline: The Venezia 64 section will present the films competing for the Golden Lion; some of the most important works of the year will screen Out of Competition, while the Orizzonti Section is set up to provide a picture of new trends in cinema. The international short film competition Corto Cortissimo, is also in the line-up."
 
The members of the jury are all important figures in the VIFF’s recent history — Catherine Breillat, Jane Campion, Emanuelle Crialese, Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Ferzan Ozpetek and Paul Verhoeven, with Zhang Yimou as chairman.
 
............................................................
 
Closing night honors for Lav Diaz film
By Ruben V. Nepales
INQUIRER.net
Last updated 08:17am (Mla time) 07/28/2007
 
LAV DIAZ'S "Kagadanan sa Banwaan ning mga Engkanto" ("Death in the Land of Encantos") has the closing night honors in a sidebar section of the coming Venice Film Festival.
 
The new work of the trailblazing Mindanao-born Filipino filmmaker, described in the festival's website as "one of the astonishing new South East Asian auteurs," is entered in the Horizons (Orizzonti) Documentary section of the prestigious festival.
 
Known for his audacious, marathon films such as "Batang Westside" and "Ebolusyon ng Isang Pamilyang Pilipino" ("Evolution of a Filipino Family"), Diaz is up against such directors as Jonathan Demme and Julian Schnabel. Last year, renowned director Spike Lee won the award in this category for "When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts."
 
The festival on the Lido, which is celebrating its 64th year, described Lav's latest opus as "The story of the great Philippine poet Benjamin Agusan, who returns to his place of birth, Padang, which has now been destroyed. Agusan lived in Russia for seven years, on a study grant, teaching and leading workshops at the university. He continued to write poetry, and published two books which describe his sadness. He made several videos, fell in love with a Slavic woman, but immediately lost a child and almost went mad. He returned in order to bury his father, mother, sister and companion, to heal wounds, or create new ones, to reminisce and reflect, to confront Mayon, with its cruel beauty, his former muse and inspiration in his youth. He went home in order to face the country he had loved and hated so much: the Philippines. "
 
The festival runs from August 29 to September 8.

....................

Date: Tue, 28 Aug 2007 20:52:47 -0400
From: Marketing - TIFF
Subject: Films from the Philippines at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival

FILMS FROM THE PHILIPPINES

Our commitment to films from the Philippines dates back over two
decades. For great directors like Lino Brocka, Toronto was a second
home. More recently we have premiered important digital films from
the new generation using this cutting edge technology to make truly
independent cinema.

2005 heralded an introduction to digital Philippine cinema with
Brillante Mendoza's first feature film The Masseur.

2006 brought Jeffrey Jeturain's Kubrador (The Bet Collector),
featuring a stunning performance by Gina Pareno; and Mel Chionglos
Twilight Dancers, which struck a balance between steamy drama and
serious social comment

2007 presents a unique opportunity to emerging and established
filmmakers in the Philippines to showcase some of the most exciting
contemporary cinema in the country today, as well as create
benchmarks in making films with limited resources in the digital
video format.

DEATH IN THE LAND OF ENCANTOS Lav Diaz, Philippines
After seven years, Filipino poet Benjamin Agusan (Roeder Camanag)
returns to his hometown of Padang after Super Typhoon Durian
devastates and buries it under mud. He wanders around the obliterated
village meeting old friends and lovers. Shot in rich black and white,
DEATH IN THE LAND OF ENCANTOS expresses an inexhaustible belief in
the regenerative power of both nature and art.

SLINGSHOT Brillante Mendoza, Philippines
An intimate glimpse into the lives of small time crooks in Manila
during a simultaneous election period and Holy Week.

PHILIPPINE SCIENCE Auraeus Solito, Philippines
Eight Philippine Science High School students come of age during the
politically volatile 80s, a time filled with excitement and fraught
with anxiety

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Ang Huling Araw ng Linggo Trailer




Our Cinemalaya 2006 full-length entry. Featuring Boots Anson-Roa, Johnny Delgado, Jennifer Sevilla, Baron Geisler, Madeleine Nicolas, Rolando Inocencio, Monica Llamas, Arnold Reyes, and Angeli Bayani. Directed by Nick Olanka.

Monday, June 25, 2007

VIRGIN LABFEST 3

Start:     Jun 28, '07
End:     Jul 8, '07
Location:     Cultural Center of the Philippines, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
THIRD SERVING OF THE VIRGIN LABFEST

VIRGIN LABFEST 3, the year’s most anticipated festival of new and untried, untested, unpublished and unstaged plays, runs from June 28 until July 8 at the Cultural Center of the Philippines. This year, the festival features the premiere of eighteen (18) new one-act plays plus staged readings of full-length plays, directed and acted by artists from some of the country’s most respected performing companies.

The first set, INTERNATIONAL NIGHT, is a compilation of plays by foreign playwrights, an innovation for this year’s festival. He-Me-She-It by Narumol Thammapruksa and directed by Jaime del Mundo is a poetic improvisation where a newcomer, an alien/stranger both influences and terrifies the members of an undisclosed remote town. Lizard by Haresh Sharma, directed by Nicolas Pichay, is a surreal and inertly violent depiction of a Singaporean household whose scheming, double-dealing, and at times cruel transactions negotiated with each other makes for a rather intense sala-set drama. Yoji Sakate’s Noh Play, Three Sisters, directed by Jose Estrella is a moving ghost story and a touching memorial to the ravages of war and the significant resonance of War in Theater. Tanghalang Huseng Batute, June 28 (3:00 PM / 8:00 PM), July 7 (8:00 PM) and July 8 (3:00 PM)

MADADRAMANG PAMILYA is household drama but definitely not telenovela fare. Skeletons in the closet, in-house rebellions, and family decisions that just have to be made—do not do this at home. Debbie Ann Tan’s Teroristang Labandera, directed by Yoshi Toshihisa, is a funny and yet disturbing destruction of class and racial stereotypes, this comedy may seem to say more than just being wacky. Bagahe by J. Dennis Teodosio and directed by Rito Asilo is a short, intense conversation between a son and his dying father torn by the need to migrate and the need to define home. Looking for Darna by Lani Montreal and directed by Khryss Adalia is about three generations of women painfully coming to terms with a reality that renders many women helpless and silent. Tanghalang Huseng Batute, June 29 (3:00 PM / 8:00 PM), July 5 (3:00 PM) andJuly 8 (8:00 PM)

The third set, XX AND X: BABALA: HINDI PANG-ISIP BATA, is the most unsettling and disturbing compilation of the season. We enjoin you to widen your understanding, come in with an open mind and expect the unexpected. Séance by Auggie Arcenas and directed by EricK Castro is a quiet yet intense confrontation between a fortune teller and her customer that becomes a battle of wit and a revelation of small cruelties and hypocrisies. Allan Lopez’ Kasaysayan, directed by Victor Villareal, is a rather macabre rendition of capitalist barbarism and a gruesome exploration of the weird, horrible ways of the bourgeoisie set in the fictional future. My Padir is an OCW by George Vail Kabristante, directed by Issa Lopez, is about an aging transvestite’ s bizarre association with a young dancer who harbors a family secret. Tanghalang Huseng Batute, June 30 (3:00 PM / 8:00 PM), July 5 (8:00 PM) and July 6 (3:00 PM)

ANG PAGDADALAGA AT IBA PANG REBELASYON still provides another take on forbidden loves, sexual desire and the fruits it reaps, both good and evil. It is also 3 variations on a theme: Spring’s awakening! Kuyom by Argel Tuason and directed by John Abul is about a young boy’s exposure to exploitation and cruelty, rendered more complicated by the environment he finds himself in, a world of gay impersonators. Three Unsent Letters, written by Arlo De Guzman and directed by Rody Vera, is an epistolary drama about a man’s awakening to love and betrayal. Letters that have not been sent become monologues of despair and a sense of renewal at the same time. Ellas Inosentes by Layeta Bucoy and directed by Tuxqs Rutaquio is about two sisters whose innocent conversation and unmalicious observations of a household not quite their own reveals the violence and inhumanity of the adults around them. Tanghalang Huseng Batute, July 1 (3:00 PM / 8:00 PM), July 6 (8:00 PM) and July 7 (3:00 PM)

CHILDREN’S PLAYS are at the Bulwagang Amado Hernandez on June 29 (3:00 PM), June 30 (10:00 AM / 3:00 PM) and July 1 (3:00 PM). Rene Villanueva’s Bertdey ni Guido, performed by the Dulaang Sipat Lawin Ensemble and directed by George de Jesus III, offers a wonderful juvenile perspective of the relationship between the personal and the political, made more marvelous with music and dance. Mga Obra ni Maestra, written and directed by Niel De Mesa and performed by the Koine Theater Foundation, is a hilarious and biting play about three young children with superpowers and are heavily conflicted between saving the world or fulfilling the grueling, tedious domestic duties that their parents have ordered them to do. James Cansanay’s Kung Pwede Sanang Ipagpalit ang Tatay, directed by Catherine Racsag is a strange but fascinating fable about a young boy who mistakenly traded his father for a toy.

IDENTITY AND POLITICS is at the Bulwagang Amado Hernandez on July 6 (8:00 PM), July 7 (3:00 PM / 8:00 PM) and July 8 (3:00 PM). May Bumubulong by Job Pagsibigan and directed by Christian Bautista is about two brothers battling for the right to claim property and lineage and revealing the fragile and uncertain state of any one’s identity. Pobreng Alindahaw by J. Dennis Teodosio and directed by Delfin Ilao is a short but hilarious allegory that starts off like a folktale for children, but the issues laid down by two dragonflies and a butterfly turn this otherwise comic fantasy into a serious look into one’s personality. Rogelio Braga’s Sa Pagdating ng Barbaro, directed by Nick Olanka and performed by the UP Repertory Company, is about a small town that witnesses a suicide, an open secret military operation in a Muslim community nearby, the coming of a stranger with a suitcase that contains a secret, which no one will ever know, and the numerous white lies of a woman.

THE BEST OF VIRGIN LABFEST 2 brings back the award-winning Palanca On My Mind by Job Pagsibigan, directed by Roobak Valle, and audience favorite Hubad by Liza Magtoto directed by Denisa Reyes, Tanghalang Huseng Batute, July 3 (8:00 PM) and July 4 (3:00 / 8:00 PM).



PUBLIC READINGS of full-length plays will be at the Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino at 7:00 PM: Glen Mas’ Games People Play (June 29), Rene Villanueva’s Baby B. (June 30), Tim Dacanay’s Teatro Porvenir (July 6) Huling Salubong by Malou Jacob (July 7).

Some of the actors appearing in Virgin Labfest 3 include Irma Adlawan, Sigrid Bernardo, Nonie Buencamino, Roeder Camanag, Buddy Caramat, Hermie Concepcion, Mailes Kanapi, Dolly de Leon, Jojit Lorenzo, Allan Manalo, Missy Maramara, Ronnie Martinez, Paolo O'Hara, Peewee O'Hara, Ama Quiambao, Cheryl Ramos, Ricky Rivero, Ruby Ruiz, Gilleth Sandico, and the Tanghalang Pilipino Actors' Company.

There will also be PLATFORM EVENTS at the Bulwagang Carlos Francisco at 5:45 PM from June 28 to July 1 and July 5-8) featuring the playwrights and directors as they discuss their works and interact with the public. BREAKOUT performances in cabaret-style will also be performed nightly at the CCP Silangan Hall.

The Virgin Labfest is a joint venture of the Cultural Center of the Philippines (SentrongPangkultur a ng Pilipinas), Tanghalang Pilipino, Writers Bloc, Inc., and the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) with the generous support of the Japan Foundation Manila.

Since 2005, the festival has witnessed the works of stage directors Tuxqs Rutaquio, Denisa Reyes, Herbert Go, Phil Noble, Victor Villareal and Roobak Valle, among others. Professional actors like Neil Ryan Sese, Irma Adlawan-Marasigan, Nonie Buencamino, Mailes Kanapi, Tess Jamias and Marj Lorico have supported the festival with their theatrical talent and dedication. Even new actors have been discovered with the performances of the Dulaang Sipat Lawin Ensemble, the Tanghalang Pilipino Actors’ Company, actors from PETA, Gantimpala Foundation, as well as freelance professionals and even student theater artists.

Dynamic, creative, experimental, at times edgy, always provocative, the Virgin Labfest has served as the venue for coming together to explore new visions, expressions and discourses, and an exciting celebration of Philippine Theater.

Tickets to the Virgin Labfest are at P200 for plays to be shown at the Tanghalang Huseng Batute & Bulwagang Amado Hernandez, and Pay-What-You- Can for play readings at the Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino. For more details, please contact Tanghalang Pilipino at 832-3661, the CCP Box Office at 832-3704, and Ticketworld at 891-9999.