DALUYONG AT HABAGAT... A Historical Soap Opera

Daluyong At Habagat
History is the very stuff of Celso Ad. Castillo's Daluyong At Habagat (The Associates And Celso Ad. Castillo Film Company). The film is concerned with events that actually happened. Daluyong aspires to being a documentary of a specific decade in Philippine history. Castillo's concern with producing the documentary effects sets the mood and tone of the film. We are presented with an authentic and very evocative sense of setting, Manila recovering from the wreckage of World War II. The documentary technique is used to provide verisimilitude to the plight of Filipino workers. In early sequences, the workers are presented as not yet integrated into the organization and assembly lines of factories. They work in the junkyard salvaging scraps of iron and bombs, one of which explodes, killing the father of Igus (Vic Vargas). From here, the film's focus concentrates on Igus, his wife Cielo (Pinky de Leon) and brother Andy (Rez Cortez). It becomes their burden to bury the father but with post-war poverty, they find themselves unable to raise the amount needed for a decent burial. Igus' inability to raise money for the funeral becomes the sole motivation for Cielo going into prostitution and Igus forcing himself into the home of Don Anselmo Tuazon (Joonee Gamboa), the junkyard owner. Igus goes to the bar where Cielo works, drags her out in the rain and beats her up until she contracts pneumonia. This pushes him to disrupt the wedding of Ella (Alma Moreno) to Jake Araneta (Ricky Belmonte), in his effort to collect compensation from Don Anselmo for his father's death, this time to be used for Cielo's hospitalization which subsequently forces him to kidnap Ella whom he uses as a shield to escape from the police who have surrounded him. With Igus in hiding, more problems arise. Cielo is compelled to return to prostitution while Andy becomes a tong collector in the marketplace.

Within the framework of such a story, Castillo develops and introduces other forms of antagonisms and conflicts which enhance the film's tension but detracts from the logic of the development of its content as they take Igus from the life of the workers. In the shoot-out during the delivery of the ransom money for Ella's release, Jake is hit in the spine rendering him impotent. This impotence increases his hatred for Igus making him thirst for sadistic revenge. It also becomes a source of tension between him and Ella who reveals that she has remained a virgin for ten years in spite of their marriage. What is amiss in this development is that the workers' problem in which the film starts and ends with is forgotten and instead it pursues a series of actions quite peripheral to the central and controlling theme. Castillo's genius is in realizing, on film the glaring actuality of place. The lush countryside in Asedillo (1971), the beaches and sunlight in Ang Pinakamagandang Hayop Sa Balat Ng Lupa, the noise and anarchy in Daluyong. In these instances, Castillo more than revises the sense of reality of a setting but authenticates it in terms of the aggression of color, sound and familiarity on our senses. In Daluyong, he goes beyond this simulation of virtual reality in favor of a more detailed documentation, a close-up of a Victory currency and the playing of Liberation Day songs. These details, however, are not sufficient to complete our sense of the real. Reality here has to be sought in the very logical development of the workers' situation during those decades. Carelessness in research led to the distortion of the characters of the workers and the imposition of soap-operatic melodrama on historical facts. Putol (Lito Anzures), for instance, was presented as a labor leader. His behavior, however, is controlled by the ethos of a lumpen. He acts as some sort of counter-terror to the violence which the rich gratuitously indulge in. In one scene, he frees Igus from misfortune by massing a group of armed men against Jake and his henchmen. Jake's hatred for Igus becomes more focused on his impotence and phallic envy than on what should have been logical. That Igus and the workers constitute a threat to their privileged position as members of the bourgeoise.

Any story on the plight of the worker as a class during the mid 40's would inevitably have to ask the question of how the workers lost political power. Such would have been the logical development of Daluyong, which was certainly within the power of Castillo as director to execute. Only by tracing the development of labor, as Castillo has chosen to begin his film, could he have provided the proper material support for the conclusions presented in teletypes at the end. Conclusions which are those of the reporter who had interviewed Putol and Cielo at Igus' funeral. Having disregarded history while pretending to be faithful to it, Castillo goes on to disregard other technical aspects. There is his failure to observe point of view. Although the film is a reconstruction of two angles of vision, that of Putol and Cielo. Their viewpoints are never respected in the development of their testimony. There are portions in Cielo's narrative which she could not have witnessed as she is not a participant or observer in the scenes. For instance, Igus' capture by Jake's henchmen is contained in Cielo's narrative which should not have happened. Towards the end, Castillo achieves a triumph. Through a series of intercutting, he shows three related series of sequences. Igus rushing headlong to meet Jake, his adversary. Andy standing at attention in a courtroom listening to a judge render his sentence and the laborers going on strike. Castillo managed to show these sequences relating to three forms of violence namely, the organized workers against an exploitative system, institutional violence against the individual and the type of anarchistic violence that man within a given context of society perpetuates against his own kind. These are a testimony to Castillo's power as an artist and his capacity to make a profound understanding of social issues. Given this equipment, he really did not have to evade historical truth.

Directed By: Celso Ad. Castillo
Screenplay: Mauro Gia Samonte
Director Of Photography: Ricardo F. David
Music: Ernani Cuenco
Film Editor: Abelardo Hulleza
Produced By: The Associates And Celso Ad. Castillo Film Company
Release Date: March 26, 1976

Si Angela Aguilar... BULAKLAK SA CITY JAIL

Bulaklak Sa City Jail
Tunay na maihahanay ang Bulaklak Sa City Jail (Cherubim Films) sa mga pinakamahusay na pelikula ng taong 1984. Ang signipikong kontribusyon ng obra ni Mario O'Hara ay ang reyalistikong pagpapakita ng isang panlipunang kondisyon sa pamamagitan ng malalim at may kalawakang pagsasalarawan ng milyu. Hindi makakailang makailang beses nang binuko ni O'Hara ang katiwalian ng hustisya sa Bagong Hari (1986) gayundin ang pagpapanggap at pananamantala ng mga may koneksyon sa mataas na kinauukulan sa pelikulang Condemned (1984). Sinundan ng Bulaklak Sa City Jail ang pakikipagsapalaran ni Angela Aguilar (Nora Aunor), biktima ng kawalang hustisya mula sa pagpasok nito sa piitan hanggang sa kanyang pagtakas at panganganak sa loob ng Manila Zoo. Ang mga tagpo sa loob ng city jail ay isang tuwirang pagpapahayag ng di makataong pagtrato sa mga nakakulong dito. Ipinakita ni O'Hara ang kalupitan at karahasang dulot ng pamumuhay sa mabangis na lungsod. Inilantad ng pelikula ang masalimuot na katiwaliang nagaganap sa loob ng piitan at ang banggaan ng malalakas na puwersang namumuno dito. Mapangahas nitong tinalakay kung paano inaabuso ni Koboy (Tom Olivar), ang kanyang posisyon bilang pulis sa pamamagitan ng pakikipagsabwatan kay Barbi (Maya Valdez) upang pansamantalang mailabas ang mga kursunadang babae para sa pansariling interes, katumabas man nito'y buhay ng isang inosenteng tulad ni Patricia (Maritess Gutierrez) at kung paano nasusuhulan ang makapangyarihang pulis upang pagtakpan ang kanyang mga ilegal na gawain. Sa ganitong konteksto, itinatampok ng Bulaklak Sa City Jail ang doble karang mukha ng hustisya. 

Itinanghal sa pelikula ang lawak at kapangyarihan ng aparatong ito ng lipunan. Ang kakayahan nitong itaguyod ang malinis na reputasyon ni Atty. Diaz (Cris Daluz), isang walang konsensyang pampublikong manananggol gaya ng ginawa niyang pakikipagpatintero kay Angela para aminin ang pagkakasala nito sa korte upang hindi na magtagal pa ang paglilitis sa kanyang kaso. Ang sensitibong paglikha ni Nora Aunor sa komplikasyon ng tauhang kanyang ginampanan ay bunga ng mga komplikasyong sosyal na likha ng kolektibong pagbangga sa malawakang kaapihang binubuhay ng lipunan na tumatatayong suhestiyon sa posibilidad ng pagtutuwid. Samantala, marubdob ang personal na layon ni Celia Rodriguez sa papel ni Lena sa paghamon sa di kumbensiyunal na depinisyon ng pagiging ina. Tunay na nakaaantig ang magiting at matatag na pagganap ni Gina Alajar bilang Juliet, isang estapadorang gagawin ang lahat para sa nag-iisang anak. Ang makatotohanang pagsasalarawan ni Maya Valdez ng bangis at tapang sa papel ni Barbi ay isang kapani-paniwalang pagganap at pagtatapat. Sa pangkalahatan, masasabing malinis na naihanay ng direktor ang magkakaugnay na tema ng pelikula na may mahalagang sinasabi tungkol sa sitwasyon ng hustisya sa lipunan. Epektibo ang isinagawa niyang pagpupunla ng mga pahiwatig tungo sa pagsisiswalat ng katiwalian sa loob ng piitan. Nagawa ng pelikulang lambungan ng misteryo ang daloy ng mga pangyayari upang sa huli'y maging mas epektibo ang pagtukoy sa mga tiwaling elemento ng hustisya. At habang nagiging kumplikado ang tunggalian, nahawakan ng pelikula ang pananabik ng manonood bunga ng maingat na editing, malikhaing sinematograpiya at ensemble na pagganap hanggang sa maipamalay sa wakas ng istorya na ang ordinaryong mamamayan ang siyang biktima ng mga mapagsamantalang elementong may hawak ng batas.

Direksiyon: Mario O'Hara
Dulang Pampelikula: Lualhati Bautista
Sinematograpiya: Johnny Araojo
Musika: Tony Aguilar
Editing: Efren Jarlego
Disenyo: Tony Aguilar
Produksiyon: Cherubim Films
Release Date: December 25, 1984


Para kay Mario O'Hara Abril 20, 1946 - Hunyo 26, 2012

Role Reversals In DARNA, KUNO...?

Darna, Kuno...?

Role reversal is taken to fantastic heights with Darna, Kuno...? (Regal Films, Inc.). Because she is pregnant, Darna (Brenda del Rio) lends her magic stone to Dondoy (Dolphy) while awaiting the birth of her baby. Darna is a pugilistic crusader with superhuman strength, Dondoy is certainly able to demonstrate his physical superiority as the flying superwoman. The storyline provides him with the opportunity to rescue Annabelle (Lotis Key), his damsel in distress from the physical dangers wrought by a Spaceman (Ruel Vernal) and his cohorts. However, the story must also take great pains to stress Dondoy's feminine side. The sudden disappearance of Annabelle's sister Esverga  (Marissa Delgado), occurs on her wedding day, hence, no one questions Dondoy's decision to disguise himself as Luningning, Chris' (Christopher de Leon) would-be bride in order to solve the mystery. It is only when Annabelle steals the magic stone that she becomes Darna. Even so her pugilistic, hence, masculine powers are carefully neutralized by her skimpy costume which is meant to reveal her feminine curves, not make her look silly as Dondoy's costume does.  Even so, the film does take a step forward in reaching traditional gender lines, since the conventional positions of male and female are here reversed, albeit to a limited extent. Dondoy arrives in the nick of time to attempt a rescue of Annabelle. However, as Darna, he gets Annabelle out of harms way and defeats the Tikbalang in a magnificent air battle.

Indeed, Darna, Kuno...? is fantasy parodying itself, for the idea of a willful, self-assertive man is by feminist standards, pure fantasy. Man, in the feminine  imagination can only be at best a hero. Woman is the allegorical symbol for masculinist desires and fears. Confined wholly to the symbolic, woman is utterly silenced and when she speaks, she functions only as the male ventriloquist's dummy. Because the film is a comedy, it parodies the binary oppositions that under normal circumstances, man is actually weak, helpless and in need of woman's protection. Dondoy is struck dumb by Darna's talisman. No one, not even Annabelle recognize him for what he really is until he chooses to divulge his secret. Moreover, the conflation of man, woman and place is reaffirmed again and again in cinema. Place, like home is feminized and woman's greatest virtue is topophilia, the affectionate attachment to places, the urge to settle down and to keep the home fires burning. When man goes out into the world, whether of his own volition or forced by circumstances, he either contaminates the world or is contaminated by it. In cinematic tradition, woman is either the ideal figure perched on her pedestal. As such, within this patriarchal discourse, every female character is always and simply the object of man's fantasy.

Direction: Luciano B. Carlos
Story: Luciano B. Carlos Adapted From Mars Ravelo's Komiks Character "Darna"
Screenplay: Toto Belano And Luciano B. Carlos
Cinematography: Claro Gonzales And Ricardo Jacinto
Music: Ernani Cuenco
Film Editor: Rogelio Salvador
Production Designer: Fiel Zabat
Produced By: Regal Films, Inc.
Release Date: March 30, 1979

TISOY! Funny And Irreverent

Tisoy!

It's a laugh a minute, once the viewer gets the hang of Ishmael Bernal's unique brand of tongue-in-cheek humor. Nothing is sacred in Tisoy! (NV Productions). The film shows Bernal at his best, witty, irreverent, satiric and light. The references to film art itself are hilarious. One scene for instance, has Christopher de Leon flirting with Corazon de la Cruz, Nora Aunor's character in Minsa'y Isang-Gamu-Gamo (1976). Another scene has De Leon telling Jay Ilagan how horseback riding is the director's (Bernal, who else?) frustration. The film spoofs are not limited to such alienation effects. Every now and then, Bernal uses a shot or a sequence taken straight out of Filipino movie clichés. One sequence has Moody Diaz with a bunch of extras dancing around the streets of Manila spoofing old musicals where a well-choreographed number hide Diaz's lack of talent. In other words, bad dancing is shown for comic effect. There are some delightful gems that belongs in the Filipino Comedy Hall of Fame. Marianne de la Riva, caught in Manila's traffic jams, for instance, holds a plant that keeps growing like Jack's magic beanstalk. The scene with Bert "Tawa" Marcelo delivering a speech to his townsfolk is a classic. All of these personalities and situations are beautifully orchestrated by Ishmael Bernal's impeccable comic timing. He never lingers too long on a joke and studiously avoids overdoses. 

Indeed, Tisoy! is all gags, visual puns, pop art, cheap gimmickry, faulty pronunciation, cuteness and sudden revelation. Releasing itself from the manacles of rationality, the film chooses to follow the easy logic of its free-wheeling farce. There is hardly any element in Tisoy! which can be faulted for lack of imagination. The film resorts to slapstick, possibly the most brainless of theatrical devices, to restore life in a dead genre. The harmless shenanigans are expertly positioned against a backdrop of more pressing concerns. The effect is almost subliminal communication, an expression that turns the movie from a game of reckless patawa into social satire. To pull off this masquerade, the scriptwriter has created some provocative comic characters. Tisoy's bohemian balikbayan is physically embodied by Christopher de Leon's physique and charisma. He even has to move in the familiar Bernal way, a kind of a half-dance, half-trance. Jay Ilagan adds a lot of color to his role as Boy Biglang Yaman. Street sweeper Aling Otik is irreverently incarnated by Moody Diaz. Bert "Tawa" Marcelo is at his most delightful in the role of Tikyo. He plays the part with just the right amount of gusto. Even Charo Santos, not noted for comedy is funny as Maribubut. All the cinematic elements are so well integrated that one doesn't talk of one without the other. True, there are a few lapses, but what's a few unfunny moments in a film which has you laughing your heart out? Tisoy! is meant for intelligent viewers, those who can distinguish between ridicule and respect, satire and farce and fact and fiction.

Directed By: Ishmael Bernal
Screenplay: Severino Marcelo
Cinematography: Arnold Alvaro
Music By: Vanishing Tribe
Film Editor: Augusto Salvador
Art Director: Pis Boado
Produced By: NV Productions
Release Date: April 30, 1977
Tisoy! theme song performed by Christopher de Leon

The Campus Scene In BLUE JEANS

Blue Jeans


The campus scene has long been proven a sure foundation for getting laughs and Joey Gosiengfiao's Blue Jeans (Regal Films, Inc.) makes the most of teachers who terrorize, students who have no interest in studying and parents who think of education as an excuse to get rid of their children. The situations in the film are unfortunately familiar to anyone who has been to school. No education gets done in this educational institution. The laughs are provided by everyone in the cast, although special mention must be made of Celia Rodriguez who steals the show several times with her portrait of self-effacing actress Aurelia Amador. Similarly, Rosemarie Gil and Freddie Webb are delightful as Dina's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guillen. Orestes Ojeda, despite a badly written role, is impressive as Tonypet, Dina's patient suitor. Even the Apo Hiking Society gets laughs without laughing. The intent of the film is clearly commercial. Gosiengfiao takes pains to give Alfie Anido ample screen time, with the most flattering camera angles. Being commercial is not a bad thing especially if the director is able to transcend exploitation. Blue Jeans does not attempt much, but it achieves what it attempts. The film is very well written. The language shifts from colegiala English technically known as pidgin English to straight urban poor Tagalog. There are a few mistakes, but none significant enough to lessen the writer's accomplishment. The situations are stock but what the writer does is what counts and he keeps surprising this viewer with provocative lines. 

Blue Jeans is very well directed. Even the shots of Anido are organically incorporated in the film's visual continuity. The production design helps set the deliberately broad character of the comedy. The acting rises above the usual. Captivating is Margie Braza as Baby although she has to learn to use her face a bit more to express varying emotions. Dina Bonnevie is her usual brilliant self in her portrayal of Geraldine Guillen. Gosiengfiao could have made more use of her comic talents which she displayed magnificently in Schoolgirls (1982). Even Alfie Anido turns in a good performance as Joey Amador. This is surely a tribute to Gosiengfiao's coaching ability since Anido's previous screen appearances were not exactly memorable. Jenny Ramirez is marvelous as Laurice. Ramirez can combine verbal wit and body movement in such an effective comic way. It effectively bursts the stereotype of the haughty contravida. Only Joel Alano's Ralph is tentative in his characterization. Bernardo Bernardo and Behn Cervantes puts in great cameo performances. There are those who feel that commercial movies can never be memorable, who expects all films to say something profound about the human experience. That is like asking every college professor to have a Ph.D., asking everybody with a Ph.D. to publish a book and asking everybody who has published a book to be a genius. In other words, those who look down on commercial film set standards that they themselves can never reach. But if a film is both commercial and artistic, it should be cause for celebration even if it does not say very much. In Blue Jeans, Gosiengfiao has succeeded in making a commercial film without compromising his artistic integrity.

Direction: Joey Gosiengfiao
Screenplay: J. Sebastian
Cinematography: Ricardo Jacinto
Musical Director: Jun Latonio
Film Editor: Rogelio Salvador
Production Design: Jorge Hernandez
Produced By: Regal Films, Inc.
Release Date: February 13, 1981