THE BRILLANTE MENDOZA POST

something to learn from

[photo from village oblivia]





I received the news via a cable TV at home on a certain french Channel and also from the tidbits of CNN and BBC. It took hours before it reached ANC and the late night news shows on major local channels. I knew it was something different and i got the feeling that some sort of political phenomenon was going on. I made quick notes though i could memorize it in my head instantly:

Brillante Mendoza. Wins Prix de la Mise en Scene. Best. Director.
Cannes. Should blog this! 62nd. Beat Tarantino. Ang Lee. Campion. Haneke.
Who won the Palme d'Or?

A few hours later i got a telecast from ANC late night shows and added to my notes:

Michael Haneke. The White Ribbon. Palme d'Or. I Knew it!

A few days later i knew that people will abhor Mendoza for his film Kinatay. Ebert achieved the greatest possible exposure by killing it over his blog and declared it as the "worst film in Cannes' history."

Sometimes it's just a pain to dwell on this issue right away. One reason is that, Roger Ebert wins all the time because he is "the most influential film critic in the world." Another reason is that I, and maybe 99% of the Filipino audience, haven't seen the film.

I figure, i need an overnight sleep to refresh my mind and start anew. After reading Ebert's 'butchery' here, and also Noel Vera's counter-'Ebert' post here and an response-to-Ebert's-post post from Michael Mirasol here, i came to a naive conclusion (might be derive from a simplistic logic i had when i was high schooler): people have a tendency to overreact over things that does not seemed to matter because it happened a long time ago. Of course, some of you might judge me as a purely hypocritical, simplistic, even irrational and derogatory but i say to you (I quote from ULYSSES): "HISTORY IS NIGHTMARE FROM WHICH I AM TRYING TO AWAKE."

The volume of comments on Ebert post from Filipino readers reminds me of a shoal of fish swimming in circles and when a big fish approach to prey, they disrupt from their cylindrical formation. They have a tendency to crumble from their arguments when one big 'fish' disrupts them and prey on them. But this is a natural phenomena by nature. It seems that the big fish comes in the form of Mendoza who achieves a complete disruption of the equilibrium these people used to have. Now, they are appalled even faulted at the thought that a Filipino 'predator' manage to create such a massive atrocity which ironically launched Mendoza's stature to unbelievable heights of publicity (maybe in the web --- of course Hayden Kho is central to our lives today) and a first time this happened in Philippine cinema.

But i smell of a bigger fish at bay, he lurks behind Mendoza, Ebert, and the sad Filipino commentators of Ebert's post: this is the fish that crumbled most civilizations in history and even change the heart of Medieval age: DOGMATISM. To rely on certain dogmas is to forge hell in front of them, a cause of human degradation and the advent of puritanism. Dogma.

Dogmatism is not a philosophical concept because it is sick to treat it as a systematic conceptual framework of thoughts and idea. One famous dogma of science during 1500s tortured the thoughts of Galileo Galilei for formulating that the moon has craters and by postulating the all bodies fall at the same rate when drop at the same height. The Medieval church says it heresy. God forgive them.

What faces us here, and i am not pointing to Ebert's assertion or some comments from his readers or anyone else, is a historical question and also a question to ask oneself: Is it heresey for Mendoza to create a film that disturbs some people to their primal senses? We might think it is fault but let the magic time unfold and maybe after two hundred years Kinatay might be considered as the prerequisite to a portion of one's history, if not in cinema, that has evolved to its maturity. We might not know but we have to note, if not to avoid, the dogmatism attached to the issue, that this dogmatism by historical standards is invalid at the time we uttered the words: it is the worst film of all, do not watch it my friends. It's demonic. It's purely evil.

Such mentality is least appreciated in film criticism and even in art criticism. Theorist of literature have proved that works from the 1800s have been historical variable and for each generation, one may see it the other way around. To put Kinatay, or other 'ultra-anti-audience films' like Pasolini's infamous Salo (1975), in history is to treat it with respect, as much as people disrespect it.

Human beings have evolve surely. TO subscribe to this fruitless dogmatism and to avoid the variability of art reception to history is to be medieval. We are in the twenty-first century where the very fabric of every human thought and the whole of the universe is a series of QUESTIONABLE and FALSIFIABLE CONCEPT. Even our existence is a questionable concept.

Did i subscribe to dogmatism in writing this post? YES, I did.

I am a medieval person.

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62nd CANNES FESTIVAL 2009 - Brillante Mendoza got Palme d'Or Nomination

a look at this year's Cannes

[main source - Variety fresh since April 23]
[images from ABC news]
[also from Cannes Website]

Chris Mingiu with Jane Fonda. His entry won Palme d'Or last year.


C
annes Film Festival
, the most prestigious film festival where true and dedicated auteurs clash to win the greatest award a film can achieve, Palme d' Or, and i would certainly stress this, an award superior to OSCAR'S Best Picture, starts on May 13, 2009 and will end with a ceremony on May 24. Certainly, this years Cannes, celebrating its 62nd anniversary, is packed with roster of auteurs that would definitely rock the international film culture.

Pedro Almodovar. Jane Campion. Quentin Tarantino. Michael Haneke. Lars von Trier. Ken Loach.

All of them are undeniably cinema's greatest auteurs to compete at this year's Cannes. With the increasing public awareness of their significance the palm leaf shall be a witness for another golden year of cinema. One must be aware that during such events as Cannes Film Fest certain historical cinematic trends might come up. To award Palme d'Or to a film is to recognize its importance to film history and to the development of cinema.

CULTURALLY EVOLVED LIST

A significantly absorbing list of all films to be shown during the event was released last April 23, about a two weeks now, and i hope this blog post is not too late to give a comprehensive look at Cannes this year. With four days away from the closing this might not be the last one to peer into the list.

This years Cannes line-up has a characterized variety and has truly evolve culturally. There is a stronghold of Asian competitors, especially from the Philippines.

Three Filipino filmmakers with three films got into the event. The Filipino auteur, Brillante Mendoza, known for his mercurial neorealist style and his epidermal penetration to the Philippine society, got a nomination for Palme d'Or with his new film "Kinatay". Adolf Alix Jr. and Raya Martin's "Manila" is granted a special screening. Also a Raya Martin film, "Independencia", was nominated for Un Certain Regard.

INDEPENDENT CINEMA: A NEW WAVE?

This is, in a way, a confirmation of what Richard Bolisay said in his manifesto ([Gibbering] On the Importance of Establishing a Film Magazine), that, and i quote his bold words:

"This movement of independent cinema is an earthquake that needs to be recorded in every possible point by the very few serious seismographs we have (most of them online), like news reports sensationalizing a national disaster."
The independent film movement of the Philippines is indeed pushing a new grounds for a new Philippine cinema. This extensive publicity of Mendoza to Cannes Film Fest since last year, when his neorealist feauture, Serbis (2008) got nomination for Palme d'Or, is parallel to Lino Brocka's Bayan Ko: Kapit sa Patalim (1985) and possibly a new frontier for the Filipino independent cinema.

MY TAKE!

Mendoza splits Cannes critics and judges for the second year this year. I am particularly interested in Medoza's changing style in film making. Masahista (2005) wasn't much of blood and body part mutilation, but his exceedingly slow rhythmic style is a unique venture to a maturity in the field. His epidermal use of the body to exhibit intense multi-layered society started at last year's Cannes with his first Palme d'Or nominated film Serbis.

This is year follows this thematic focus. From an interview with Claire Rosenberg, i quote:

"Mendoza in "Kinatay" traces 24 hours in the day of a trainee policeman, happily beginning with his wedding in the morning to close with the young man's first outing at night with a band of corrupt colleagues.

To his surprise, fear and anguish, they pick up a prostitute accused of betrayal and wind up torturing, raping, killing and hacking her before disposing of the body parts across Manila.

"This is not just entertainment, these kinds of stories are real," Mendoza said at a news conference.

Asked about his novel style and the lack of action and slow rhythm of his films, Mendoza said "I want people to have a different kind of experience, to be with the character rather than just watching from outside." [link here]

With Isabelle Huppert as president, the Jury has a stronghold of female cinema giants which will favorably launch Jane Campion's Bright Star for her second Palme d'Or. Of course, Mendoza's Kinatay and Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds would not appeal much to the Jury if this is the case. Pedro Almodovar's Los Abrazos rotos (Broken Embraces) starring Penelope Cruz is definitely plump for the golder palm. Ang Lee's Taking Woodstock will take nods and also Tsai Ming-Liang's Face. I would certainly love Michael Haneke's The White Ribbon to win Palme d'Or and also Lars von Trier's Antichrist because it is shot using a Red One digital camera, a common tendency of von Trier's experiment on style. Alain Resnais, back from the dead, will surely rock Cinema Lumiere with his Les Herbes Folles. Resnais was a part of the historical French New Wave fifty years ago with his film Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959). This film is contains the most stylized flashbacks scenes i have ever witness, such a grandeur to find it so riveting.

In summary my top 5 films in no particular order to win the Palme d'Or:

1) Bright Star
2) The White Ribbon
3) Broken Embraces
4) Antichrist
5) Kinatay

I shall end here with this one :



VOLVER


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I'M BACK: HAPPY BIRTHDAY JEK!

A delayed but happy post dedicated to an old friend...
[all photos are stolen from jerrick's friendster account]



After 10 days of silence, I'm back with a vengeance. Before I kill Angels and Demons (Howard, 2009) with full force tomorrow (for i have seen it at a mall at Naga City yesterday) i would like to share some of my adventures during my 10 days leave. I went home from Manila last Wednesday, May 13, via an ass-torturing twelve-and-a-half hour bus ride to Sorsogon, my home town, the tip of Luzon island. Starting that day i intentionally cut myself off online to be with my family. I went with them on numerous places around the Bicol region and found myself on memory lane.


I went to the City of Love, Tabaco City (Paris, step aside) and recently, i just got back from an exhilarating trip from Naga City to write a post dedicated to a human being who celebrates his birthday today.



HAPPY BIRTHDAY JERRICK!

Jek with his cousin.

Like many of my friends and myself, Jerrick is a crazy one. I have known him a few years ago because he's my neighbor up at Kalayaan Dormitory where we spent our freshmen years in college. Surely, the blend of music and coffee three in the morning urged me to visit his room and make friends. This is not queer as you might think (recalling Ennis Del Mar's note to Jack Twist "I ain't queer.") but a brotherly love (okay, that's a bit off).

Art creates enumerable connections between people. Jerrick being a soul-artist of music and me being a gangrened-infested artist of words found each other much alike: alone, isolated, crazy and maladjusted with a sheer fixation on classical rock and R&B. We spent most of the time tied to each others chair like twins.

We are two artist from a strange land serenading sirens and hopping from place to place to find a home at the end of world.



Jerrick stands over the rock at the end of the world.

Ciao!

This post will be followed by my Cannes post.

***

OFF TO MT. MAKILING

another "just a peek"


Mt. Makiling


It's just two hours away before the bus departs for a two-and-a-half day camp which will serve as our final exam for my CWTS (Civic Welfare and Training Service) subject under the Military Science Department of UP. This is to complete the required six units of my NSTP (National Service Training Program) course, which every college student of every school in the country should take.

So i would like to spare to you my checklist of THINGS TO BRING:

.
Clothes & Others
Shorts (2)
Maong Pants (2)
Jogging Pants (1)
Swimming Trunks (1)
Goggles (1)
Undies (7)
Socks (5)
Shirt (10)
Jacket (1)
Blanket (1)
Bed sheet (1)
Towel (2)
Umbrella (2)
Belt (1)


Food
Canned Goods (Century Tuna)
Cupcakes
Nuts (hahaha! always has been)
6-L mineral Water
1-L mineral Water for 7-hour trekking
Can Opener
Lighter
Aluminum Foil (food storage)
Lunchbox
Spoon and Fork


Medicines

Gears
Flashlight (for night navigation)
Mosquito repellent
6 Large garbage bags (eco-friendly for makiling)
Whistle (for emergency purposes)
Raincoat
Tent
Shoes
Slippers
Cap
Sling
Gloves
DigiCam (???)


Toiletries
Tissue
Toothbrush
Toothpaste
Floss
Shampoo
Soap
Lufa

Of course i also packed ULYSSES in between my undies and shorts. Everything listed above is sealed by plastic for waterproofing in case a heavy rain comes or a flood (flood on top of the mountain? I don't think so!)

I'm half excited and half plague with doubts. Im glad the tropical typhoon "Emong" will gladly exit by Saturday according to the PAGASA website. I was praying hard last night to let the storm pass away the areas of Laguna and Manila.

I'm ready to leave civilization but before that last night i watched an outdoor documentary by Werner Herzog, Grizzly Man (2005), to pump up my urge for the great call of nature up at Makiling.


It's a universally praise documentary about the 'grizzly man', Timothy Treadwell, who spent 13 summers with the great Grizzly bears at the Alaskan Peninsula unarmed and live with great proximity with the bears.

Charlie Russell says:

"Herzog is a skillful filmmaker so a large percentage of those who watch the movie Grizzly Man, overlook Timothy’s amazing way with animals even though to me this stands out very strongly. The fact that Timothy spent an incredible 35000 hours, spanning 13 years, living with the bears in Katmai National Park, without any previous mishap, escapes people completely. Even with his city-kid background, I found myself mesmerized by what he could do with animals. Most people now see him only the way Herzog skillfully wanted his audience to see him; as an idiot who continually “crossed nature’s line”, what ever that means. Perhaps, in his mind, nature’s line is something behind which bears and other nasty things reside who will inevitably kill you if you go there without a gun. He takes everything Timothy stood for and turned it 180°, the result which he then weaves into his own unsophisticated agenda. The same material in the hands of someone with more ethical intentions and some sensitivity to both man and bear could have made a very different movie. The ending of the story was bound to be a problem for anyone trying to make him look like a hero. Timothy wrote his own epitaph. " (link)

Okay, i leave you with that.

Ciao!

***



BUSY, READING ULYSSES

just a peek


ULYSSES and the Sirens


Just to let you know that I'm alive and breathing. Yes. I am busy, very busy reading "the greatest novel of the century", ULYSSES, by James Joyce. I have set aside film studies to key in to one of the greatest works in modern literature, to appreciate it eternally and to understand how one can create such a life-force. One can learn a lot from Joyce as a writer and as a reader. When one reads ULYSSES, one has welcome a great challenge. He welcomes Joyce's manifestation as a writer, as the artist of the soul, and should consider Ulysses not a book but a work of art. Ulysses is, i have to admit this, practically an easy read.

Though famous for keeping critics and literary scholars busy for the next three hundred years because of its style and literary puns and allusions, this is not central to ULYSSES. What is central to ULYSSES is life. Life as it is in Dublin, or anywhere else, and through this stream of life in which the main characters (Bloom, Molly, and Stephen) dwell, creates an almost universal moment (the whole of the 673 pages is shot in a single day, June 16, 1904) so powerful it reaches into us, as readers, and changes our own dispositions, sense of being, and perhaps our own lives.

It immortalizes the ordinary modern man.

I'm on Episode (Chapter) 11, Sirens.

Ciao!

-----
PERSONAL NOTES:

Will resume film studies after reading ULYSSES.

I'm preparing also for a camping activity this coming Saturday at Mt. Makiling, wish me luck. May God provide us the best way through the challenges that awaits us there.

Go Team Harot!
****

DISNEY RECYCLES TEMPLATES, OUCH!

i got this from TimesOnline
[video source -YouTube user WETR0X]





With my increasing fascination to Disney Animated Films, through Sergei Eisenstein's work on the protoplasticism, i cannot imagine that this video would come up. One can approach this issue in two ways: one, authenticity and two, integrity.

AUTHENTICITY

This exhibits a technique in film animation called rotoscoping. It is a tracing technique in which an original live-action footage is traced frame by frame using a rotoscope. This is to create a more realistic depiction of body movement. This also leads to a more stylize approach to animation during the 1930s of Disney when it was employed to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Economically, this can cut a lot from Disney's budget. The technique as observed in this clip is highly extended from Snow White to other films. This can lead to a misinterpretation that rotoscoping is a form of dishonesty having used same scenes for a couple of times over different films. This should not be the case since rotoscoping is used by industry for a time now.


INTEGRITY


On the contrary, this shows that Disney, having used a singular movement over different films, lacks integrity. I presumed, not until now, that cartoon movements on Disney Classics such as The Jungle Book (1967) and Snow White, were original and unique. This unsavory news have led me to vacate Disney films with a vague heart and move to the plethora of Studio Gibli to focus all my energy there. I cannot imagine that a large academic respect has been given to Disney studio for making legacies on animation for decades notably Eisenstein's essays on Disney.

Tsk!
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