TOP FILMS OF [A] DECADE: None From Philippine Cinema

...it's weird, ya know...

TOP 5
from top: Syndromes and a Century, Platform, Still Life, Beau Travail, and In the Mood for Love




We have "over sixty film curators, historians, archivists and programmers from festivals, cinematheques and similar organizations around the world participated... to pick the films they thought were the most important of the past decade." By the 'decade' Cinematheque Ontario means from 1999 to 2009. HarryTutle notes:
"Just a reminder, a decade doesn't start at zero until 9... There was no year zero at Jesus' birth. The calendar went from year -1 to year 1. The last millenium started on year 1001 and ended in 2000, just like the previous one started on year 1 and ended on year 1000. The XXth century started on year 1901 and ended on year 2000, thus the name "Twentieth" while all years start by 19." (here)

What I am talking about is the news released by Cinematheque Ontario last Monday, November 23, 2009, entitled TIFF Cinematheque's Best Of The Decade Poll Presents The Classics Of Today. November 25 when Girish published his reaction on the poll and from there news waves saturated the film blogosphere about its variety, appropriateness and neglect and marginalization of other cinematic traditions like popular cinema and documentary form mostly raised by Girish on his blog. This poll is organized by Cinematheque's Senior Programmer James Quandt during TIFF a few weeks ago.

| THE LIST | [from their site]

1 | Syndromes and a Century (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thailand) - 53 votes

2 | Platform (Jia Zhang-ke, Hong Kong, China/China/Japan/France) - 49 votes

3 | Still Life (Jia Zhang-ke, China) - 48 votes

4 | Beau travail (Claire Denis, France) - 46 votes

5 | In the Mood for Love (Wong Kar-wai, Hong Kong, China) - 43 votes

6 | Tropical Malady (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, France/Thailand/Germany/Italy) - 38 votes

7 | The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (Cristi Puiu, Romania) - 35 votes
Werckmeister Harmonies (Béla Tarr, Hungary) - 35 votes

8 | Éloge de l'amour (Jean-Luc Godard, Switzerland/ France) - 34 votes

9 | 4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days (Cristian Mungiu, Romania) - 33 votes

10 | Silent Light (Carlos Reygadas, Mexico/France/Netherlands) - 32 votes

11 | Russian Ark (Alexander Sokurov, Russia/Germany) - 31 votes

12 | The New World (Terrence Malick, USA) - 30 votes

13 | Blissfully Yours (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, France/Thailand) - 29 votes

14 | Le Fils (Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne, Belgium/France) - 27 votes

15 | Colossal Youth (Pedro Costa, Portugal/France/Switzerland) - 25 votes

16 | Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse (Agnès Varda, France) - 24 votes
In Vanda's Room (Pedro Costa, Portugal/Germany/Italy/Switzerland) - 24 votes
Songs from the Second Floor (Roy Andersson, Sweden/Denmark/Norway) - 24 votes

17 | Caché (Michael Haneke, France/Austria/Germany/Italy) - 23 votes
A History of Violence (David Cronenberg, USA) - 23 votes
Mulholland Drive (David Lynch, France/USA) - 23 votes
Three Times (Hou Hsiao-hsien, Taiwan) - 23 votes

18 | Rois et reine (Arnaud Desplechin, France) - 21 votes

19 | Elephant (Gus Van Sant, USA) - 20 votes

20 | Talk to Her (Pedro Almodóvar, Spain) - 19 votes

21 | The Wind Will Carry Us (Abbas Kiarostami, Iran/France)- 18 votes
YI YI (A One and a Two) (Edward Yang, Taiwan/Japan) - 18 votes

22 | Pan's Labyrinth (Guillermo del Toro, Spain) - 17 votes

23 | L'Enfant (Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne, Belgium/France) - 16 votes
The Heart of the World (Guy Maddin, Canada) - 16 votes
I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (Tsai Ming-liang, Taiwan/France/Austria) - 16 votes
Star Spangled to Death (Ken Jacobs, USA) - 16 votes

24 |
The World (Jia Zhang-ke, China/Japan/France) - 14 votes

25 | Café Lumière (Hou Hsiao-hsien, Japan) - 13 votes
The Headless Woman (Lucrecia Martel, Argentina/Spain/France/Italy) - 13 votes
L'Intrus (Claire Denis, France) - 13 votes
Millennium Mambo (Hou Hsiao-hsien, Taiwan/France) - 13 votes
My Winnipeg (Guy Maddin, Canada) - 13 votes
Saraband (Ingmar Bergman, Sweden) - 13 votes
Spirited Away (Hiyao Miyazaki, Japan) - 13 votes
I'm Not There (Todd Haynes, USA) - 13 votes

26 | Gerry (Gus Van Sant, USA) - 12 votes

27 | Distant (Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Turkey) - 11 votes
Dogville (Lars von Trier, Denmark/Sweden/UK/France/Germany) - 11 votes
The Royal Tenenbaums (Wes Anderson, USA) - 11 votes

28 | Alexandra (Alexander Sokurov, Russia/France) - 9 votes
demonlover (Olivier Assayas, France) - 9 votes

29 | Atanarjuat, The Fast Runner (Zacharias Kunuk, Canada) - 8 votes
Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Tsai Ming-liang, Taiwan) - 8 votes

30 | Longing (Valeska Grisebach, Germany) - 7 votes
Secret Sunshine (Lee Chang-dong, South Korea) - 7 votes
Vai e Vem (João César Monteiro, Portugal) - 7 votes
Far From Heaven (Todd Haynes, USA/France) - 7 votes

| THE TALK | [being polemic and all!]

The "LIST" CONCEPT


The classic argument: "Lists are a pig's thing. Personal tastes degenerates into rude generalizations." We know that there are 60 film buffs that participated on this poll, and most of them are critically lauded with achievements on film criticism and theory. And we don't know these guys exactly (the list of participants is available upon request), but we are certainly sure that their personal selection is marked with a certain critical balance (is there balance at all?). We are confident of their choices because we know they have expertise of their respective fields. So why 'a pig's thing'? Voting for the top films somewhat marginalize others, especially those which belongs to the 'uncirculated section', otherwise known as the Avant-Garde/Experimental films. Girish took a note on this:

"The list privileges narrative, feature-length films. Avant-garde/experimental cinema is almost wholly absent (save Ken Jacobs, and Apichatpong, whose work straddles narrative and avant-garde modes). Thus, for instance: no James Benning, Peter Tscherkassky, Nathaniel Dorsky, Michael Robinson, or (again) Jennifer Reeves. Also: no short films except Guy Maddin's The Heart of the World." (here)

It certainly cuts the rest from recognition. Even mainstream films are not represented at all. Girish again note:
"By explicitly advancing the cause of art cinema, a poll such as this automatically marginalizes the aesthetic merits of commercial cinema. So, from Hollwyood to Bollywood, popular cinema barely registers here." (here)
I don't seem to understand why they have polled it too soon. Isn't November of 2009 not December 2010?

NONE FROM PHILIPPINE CINEMA

In a general observation, Philippine Independent Cinema peaked during the start of the millennium, and the concentration of creative effort peaked a few years ago when Mendoza 's feature Serbis (2008) sent shocks on the international circuit. Soon to followed are Raya Martin's experimental films and Lav Diaz's magnum opus works. And the rest are history.

I am surprised by the neglect of Lav Diaz's works which, I think, have not reached Toronto at all. Historians must be aware of Lav's features because of their eminent scale (averaged from 5 to 7 hours long). Most of his films have eclipsed most of Tarr and Costa's work. Evolution of a Filipino Family (2004) is, i think, the best Filipino film of the decade. But this neglect is highly understandable: lack of circulation. Most Filipino independent filmmakers nowadays favored experimentation over canonical narration, a postmodernist stance practiced my Martin, Mendoza, Khavn dela Cruz and Diaz himself. We recently have Pepe Diokno's Engkwentro (2009) as an example of the overall tendency of Philippine cinema towards experimentalist approach. Also equally understandable is the lack of critical study to these features. But certainly, we cannot actually say that study equals greatness. However, it must be so that Citizen Kane (1941) have started the inquiry of film as art hence the start of film studies [if not without Andre Bazin this could not be possible].

I hope the Cinematheque Ontario post the individual list from " sixty film curators, historians, archivists and programmers".

I hope...

1) ...Brokeback Mountain was included.
2) Edward Yang's Yi Yi was shortlisted on the top 10 list.
3) David Lynch's Inland Empire.
4) Paul Anderson's features
5) Ozon and Dumont's features.
6) More documentaries and animated features...
7) Hou's Red Balloon.
8) Folman's Waltz with Bashir



Ciao!
***

I strongly don't want to read...

...news anymore...

"10 more bodies..." My friend went on and on reading a news from ABS-CBNNEWS.COM and i wanted to get out of the room to fled from the emptiness, for it was horrendous! Horrendous in every sense of the word! What is happening to our moral fiber? Have we lost it? This is insanity, yeah, insanity with a big blow on our history.
......

Mean Streets (1973)

...because i love it!

"Thematics considers subject matter and themes as components of the constructive process. The researcher may study motifs, iconography, and themes as materials, as constructive principles, or as effects of constructive principles...
...thematics informs many people's thinking about cinema... Thematics lies perhaps closest to the method-dominated criticsm, but within the tradition of poetics there have been wide-ranging theoretical and methodological debates of a kind not seen in interpretative approaches...

...is that of Large-scale form. The poetics of literature explores principles of progression and development governing the well-made play, the sonnet, or the adventure of the novel...
...Stylistics, the third led of the poetics tripod, deals with the materials and patterning of the medium as components of the constructive process."


---David Bordwell
from Poetics of Cinema (2008, Routledge).


Ciao!
***

"The writer...

...who believes in life dies at his own hands. It must be experimental, in a way, to look life as it is, as it normally blends in, or as it becomes distinguished from the stream in which it flows. The whole of it is a premium whole, a totality to drive a universe in full, swinging motion, the pristine concept of death, the stop of it all. Look at Hemingway, Woolf and the memories of Proust, the melancholia of this world shall never end, like a stream, it will envelop nations and set in motion the whole of writers who love life but hate his own."
---- me, writing it on a piece of paper at Starbucks.

When I wrote this I was thinking about my two main characters, Leonard and Marcus, the space in which they occupy and the issues that Mark, a friend of mine, have raised about situating them in the spirit of time in which they belong. Perhaps, I am a classicist. I am a hard-boiled admirer of the syntax of Woolf, Proust and Joyce and the spirit of time in which my characters move is the culture of the past, the 1920s and their ideologies are partly Marxist and existentialist. What happens today? How, a writer, whose vision of today's spirit of time is lost? Am I lost? Lost in dreams, fantasies? Am I in doubt? And I wanted it all:

"Ineluctable modality of the visible: at least that if no more, thought through my eyes. Signatures of all things I am here to read, seaspawn and seawrack, the nearing time, that rusty boots. Snotgreen, bluesilver, rust: coloured signs. Limits of the diaphane. But he adds: in bodies. Then he was aware of them bodies before of them coloured. How? By knocking his scone against them, sure. Go easy. Bald he was and a millionaire, maestro de color de sanno. Limit of the diaphane in. Why in? Diaphane, adiaphane. If you can put your five finger through it it is a gate, if not a door. Shut your eyes and see."

---- Telemachus, first part, ULYSSES (1921, James Joyce)
And I moaned a little while because inside i know i must write in the spirit of time, but where is it, the spirit, time?


Ciao!
***

Johnny Delgado (1945 - 2009)

...passed away...

But life goes on...

Ciao Johnny!

For Keith Hernandez Cipriano

...someone close to my heart...

As a graduating student:
with a degree in BA English Studies
Major in English Language



Keith, as we ordinarily call him, is one of my closest friends. This is my way of celebrating his existence. Today is his 20th birthday. I can always remember Keith by his distinctive music playlist which compose of mostly classics from classical Hollywood films, disco music from the 70s. Being his roommate for one summer, a song remains faithful to my memory.



Dancing Queen
one of his favorite songs


This is for him!


with me

with another close friend, Gela.

with me, glorifying everything!

a spontaneous joker!

doing the tongue thing with RJ!



pushing boundaries together!



together. forevaaa!



Keep it as it is.

We love you Keith! More power to you and your endeavors ahead.


Keith, welcome to the world once again!

***

"But...

...Thompson is hardly an anarchist. Her analysis is systematic, following her critical assumption that films are systematically unified, with devices on a variety of levels (narrative, stylistic, and ideological) subordinated to an organizing "dominant". It is her sense of these interrelations that make Thompson impatient with easy satisfaction of interpretation."
--- Tom Gunning on Kristin Thompson's Breaking the Glass Armor: Neoformalist Film Analysis. (Film Quarterly, Vol. 43, No. 3 (Spring, 1990) pp. 52-54) (here)


Ciao!
***

Still reading it, hope to make my own one for December, probably on Tokyo Story (1953), Children of Paradise (1945), La Grande Illusion (1937), Seven Samurai (1953), and
Breathless
(1960), Serbis (2008), and tsadaaan... 2012 (Emmerich, 2009).

Flexibility of Neoformalist approach is highly intriguing. I love it! But it needs to be tested like many other theory.


Ciao2x!



***

University of the Philippines - Film Institute (UPFI) has a new website, at last! I have been waiting for this like about one year ago. Applause! Applause! Applause! [here!]

Perhaps the most unexpected cinematic adventure i had this week, apart from some good old porn classics and Rolland Emmerich's bombastic 2012 (2009) which most of my friends like, was Manila (Martin and Alix, 2009) [here, here, and here], the almost five-hour contemplative epic Now Showing (Martin, 2008) [here, Ogg's here, Alexis' here, Harry's here, Cahiers' here, and here], and the In Memoriam: Alexis Tioseco specials: John Giavato's Profit Motive and the Whispering Wind (2007), and A Candle (For Alexis and Nika) (2009), and Bontoc Eulogy (Fuentes, 1995). I am not surprised mainly because of their aesthetics but the superlative reason of watching all films at UPFI Cine Adarna and the Videoteque almost alone. It is somehow not a rewarding experience at all.

Saturday last week I was pumped up on watching Emmerich's 2012 with friends, and the Trinoma cinema was full, the audiences were shrieking, kicking and gasping altogether, such a wonderful experience on a very ordinary film! However, upon watching Now Showing at UPFI's Videoteque, I watched it alone in a cold, dark room, and I am sad that I am alone, why am I alone watching a big film, an important film by Raya Martin, why? Though I prefer to watch DVDs in my dorm room alone, I can never ever forget watching such a film in a small video room in solitude! Have all people gone on strike! Where did all the people go! Where oh where! Cinema, for me, died on that day, November 18 of 2009, on that room! I killed myself right after that by eating a piece of meat (of course, you must know that I don't eat meat at all for about six months now!). ;-(

Ciao! T.T


Remembering PSYSC...

...is something to sing about...

L-R: moi in gray, Rovir, Irish, Hansel, Anacel, Mona, Precy
---- extraordinary science clubbers! (@NAIA Terminal 3)


and the rest of PSYSC facilitators wearing costumes!
Me on the upper rightmost part with a hoodie!
(@Sampaguita Gardens, New Washington, Aklan)


Beside films, I do science clubbing for fun and, most importantly, for service.

***

Cinema Diaz

...is [Melanc_ol_a]...


This is the UP Film Institute.

Diaz' Melancholia last year on a theater a few blocks from where I live in the campus. [Melanc_ol_a]

Ciao!
***

Gouttes d'eau sur pierres brûlantes (2000)

... or Water Drops on Burning Rocks...

Warning: For mature readers only, or for those who have reached cinematic quintessence.


BUT! Ozon is fun: melancholia.

.
. .
. . .

The corners of my head...


...are squared (unsquared).

You have red hair...
...I know...
... and green eyes...


...is it symmetry?...
...as all doors have?...


. vis . a . vis.


...Life --->
<--- is figures traced by light...


... and the parallelisms...

...dichotomies...



The comparative and meticulous weight of things past...




... come...

come along...


... the blood of the Sabbath...


...to look at oneself whole...


...lying down...


... and cigarettes in my head... to be as it is...


... or not...


I smoke, blow. So as the wind, as it goes.


...Oh melancholia...


Let me call him... uhmmm...


...queer...

... dead...


...death...


Fin de Ozon, my friends. Fin de Ozon.


E
xperimental again!


Ciao!
****