Review: “Manila In The Fangs Of Darkness”

Maynila sa mga Pangil ng Dilim (Khavn dela Cruz, 2008)
English Title: Manila in the Fangs of Darkness

Bembol Roco, from his first starring role as an innocent provincial in a quest to rescue his sweetheart from an abusive Chinese man in Maynila: sa Mga Kuko ng Liwanag (Manila in the Claws of Neon, Lino Brocka, 1975), has evolved as an actor. Physically, apart from his completely shaven head, age has hardened his once-immaculate mug and covered it with lines and curves that dispel any trace of his former youth and innocence. Professionally, Roco adapted to suit his evolving physical features and ventured into playing thugs and villains, a far cry from his portrayal of naive Julio Madiaga, which catapulted him to public consciousness. Despite the vast moral and emotional distance between the roles he plays, he still succeeds, granting the villains he portrays with an ominousness that feels natural, and with a mere flicker of his hard-edged eyes, he momentously evokes either a vengeful depth or a wanton-hungry craze, something that is usually missing from the underwritten foes that Filipino cinema can normally afford.

In Khavn dela Cruz’s Maynila sa mga Pangil ng Dilim (Manila in the Fangs of Darkness), Roco plays Kontra Madiaga, a character whose name is derived from two characters from Roco’s vast filmography: Julio Madiaga, the wide-eyed protagonist of Maynila: sa Mga Kuko ng Liwanag and Commander Kontra, the ruthless fundamentalist paramilitary commander from Orapronobis (Fight For Us, Lino Brocka, 1989). Much more than the name, Kontra Madiaga is a character borne out of the marriage of Julio Madiaga’s stubborn messianic trait and Commander Kontra’s intrinsic disregard for humanity in favor of a perceived good. Trapped in a twilight zone-like scenario where he aimlessly follows Ligaya (Ella Cortez), draped in an immaculate white dress, in the dirty streets of Manila, Kontra Madiaga is more of a conceptual creation rather than a character meant to live and breath in a traditional narrative. Speaking through voice-overs, he alludes to the past, depicted through snippets from Maynila, Orapronobis, and other Brocka films like Kislap sa Dilim (Sparkle in the Dark, 1991) and Hayop sa Hayop (Beast to Beast, 1978), and forces the audience to weave these Brocka characters into the confused yet powerful force that is Kontra Madiaga.

Maynila sa mga Pangil ng Dilim is presumably dela Cruz’s ode to Brocka’s filmmaking. It is an interesting, if not totally surprising, concept, considering that dela Cruz, despite his obvious reverence to Brocka, is a filmmaker who consciously shies from working under the influence of Brocka’s school of social realism. The closest dela Cruz has entered into Brocka territory is with Squatterpunk (2006), a silent documentary, usually accompanied by a musical live act, that exposes the paradox that exists within Manila’s slums, where humanity survives despite severe poverty, and even there, dela Cruz inflicts the concept with authorial integrity, pushing the boundaries of the medium to evoke the youthful and experimental verve that his cinema possesses. Maynila sa mga Pangil ng Dilim exposes the vast differences between dela Cruz and Brocka’s styles.

Dela Cruz filters convenience from Brocka’s filmmaking. Maynila sa mga Pangil ng Dilim is a difficult film not because of the palpable violence and apathy, but because its concept is designed to alienate. Rather than being constricted by the requirements of melodrama and social realism, dela Cruz widens his canvass. He utilizes Roco as an actor who has evolved from stubborn innocence to nihilistic assuredness to create a phantom of a character that represents the deteriorating morality of the embattled metropolis. Roco’s interpretation of dela Cruz’s wild creation is pitch-perfect. He is confused, angry, lonely, and damned; much like the city that has become the subject of dela Cruz’s explorations.

With chosen scenes from Brocka’s films screening in sequence with sequences directed by dela Cruz, one can only appreciate Brocka’s visual, narrative and emotional succinctness: the way he packs fear, insanity, and other emotions within a few minutes of studio-manufactured dialogue and directorial deftness. In comparison, dela Cruz’s scenes seem cerebral and impenetrable. The strange combination of Brocka’s populist filmmaking and dela Cruz’s experimantations only heightens the nightmarish tone of the picture. The crisp digital footage of dela Cruz juxtaposed with the aging footage of Brocka’s films evoke a twisted sense of reminiscence. The stylized voice-overs reinforces the existence of Kontra Madiaga as a creature of the imagination rather than a traditional cinematic figure. The purposely incohering soundbits and subtitles forwards dela Cruz’s concept of recreating or refashioning Brocka’s cinematic figures into a singular character that is the anointed spokesperson of Manila’s intrinsic darkness.

khavn on June 12th, 2009 | File Under Uncategorized | No Comments -

BERNAL IN LOVE: In celebration of the 13th Death Anniversary of Ishmael Bernal & the best Pinoy love flicks from Fernando Poe Sr. to Angel Locsin

.MOV International Digital Film Festival & Mag:net Café Katipunan
present
a Cinekatipunan.MOV film series

“BERNAL IN LOVE”
In celebration of the 13th Death Anniversary of Ishmael Bernal
& the best Pinoy love flicks from Fernando Poe Sr. to Angel Locsin

June 1 to 30, 2009
5:30 to 7:30pm
Mag:net Café Katipunan (in front of Miriam College, beside Rustan’s Supermarket)

June 17, Wednesday
“BERNAL NIGHT”
Starring:
ITCHY WORMS
GOLIATH (featuring Lourd De Veyra)
THE DISCOBALL
BISCOCHONG HALIMAW
SANITY KIT

THE BERNAL IN LOVE CALENDAR

June 1, Monday
LET THE LOVE BEGIN
[Mac Alejandre | 2005 | Richard Guttierez, Angel Locsin, Mark Herras & Jennylyn Mercado]

June 2, Tuesday
ALL MY LIFE
[Laurenti Dyogi | 2004 | Aga Muhlach & Kristine Hermosa]

June 3, Wednesday
NGAYONG NANDITO KA
[Jerry Lopez Sineneng | 2003 | Jericho Rosales & Kristine Hermosa]

June 4, Thursday
KAILANGAN KITA
[Rory Quintos | 2002 | Aga Muhlach & Claudine Barreto]

June 5, Friday
KAHIT ISANG SAGLIT
[Gilbert Perez | 2000 | Judy Ann Santos & Piolo Pascual]

June 6, Saturday
KAILANGAN KO’Y IKAW
[Joyce Bernal | 2000 | Regine Velasquez & Robin Padilla]

June 8, Monday
SANA MAULIT MULI
[Olivia Lamasan | 1995 | Aga Muhlach & Lea Salonga]

June 9, Tuesday
MINSAN LANG KITANG IIBIGIN
[Chito Rono | 1993 | Maricel Soriano, Gabby Concepcion & Zsazsa Padilla]

June 10, Wednesday

June 11, Thursday
MAY MINAMAHAL
[Jose Javier Reyes | 1993 | Aga Muhlach – Aiko Melendez]

June 12, Friday
NGAYON AT KAILANMAN
[Joel Lamangan | 1992 | Sharon Cuneta & Richard Gomez]

June 13, Saturday
IKAW PA LANG ANG MINAHAL
[Carlitos Sigiuon Reyna | 1992 | Maricel Soriano & Richard Gomez]

ISHMAEL BERNAL WEEK

June 15, Monday
DALAWANG PUGAD…ISANG IBON
[Ishmael Bernal | 1977 | Vilma Santos & Romeo Vasquez]

June 16, Tuesday
IKAW AY AKIN
[Ishmael Bernal | 1978 | Nora Aunor, Vilma Santos & Christopher De Leon

June 17, Wednesday
5:30pm: SALAWAHAN
[Ishmael Bernal | 1979 | Rio Locsin & Jay Ilagan]

9:00pm “BERNAL NIGHT”
Featuring Itchy Worms, Goliath, Disco Ball, Biscochong Halimaw, Sanity Kit

11:30pm BAKIT MAY PAG-IBIG PA: Unang Kasaysayan
[Ishmael Bernal | 1979 | Nora Aunor - Christopher De Leon]

June 18, Thursday
RELASYON
[Ishmael Bernal | 1982 | Vilma Santos & Christopher De Leon]

June 19, Friday
BROKEN MARRIAGE
[Ishmael Bernal | 1983 | Vilma Santos & Christopher De Leon]

June 20, Saturday

June 22, Monday
SINUNGALING MONG PUSO
[Maryo J. Delos Reyes | 1992 | Vilma Santos, Aga Muhlach & Gabby Concepcion]

June 23, Tuesday
BILANGIN MO ANG BITUIN SA LANGIT
[Elwood Perez | 1989 | Nora Aunor & Tirso Cruz III]

June 24, Wednesday
SOLTERO
[Pio De Castro | 1984 | Jay Ilagan, Chanda Romero & Rio Locsin]

June 25, Thursday
DEAR HEART
[Danny Zialcita | 1981 | Sharon Cuneta & Gabby Concepcion]

June 26, Friday
KUNG MANGARAP KA’T MAGISING
[Mike De Leon | 1977 | Christopher De Leon & Hilda Koronel]

June 27, Saturday
ANG DAIGDIG KO’Y IKAW
[Efren Reyes | 1965 | FPJ & Susan Roces]

June 29, Monday
FLORANTE & LAURA
[Vicente Salumbides | 1949 | Rogelio De La Rosa & Rosita Rivera]

June 30, Tuesday
GILIW KO
[Carlos Vander Tolosa | 1939 | Fernando Poe & Mila Del Sol]

khavn on June 2nd, 2009 | File Under Uncategorized | No Comments -

“Goodbye My Shooting Star” @ Taumbayan

Where: TAUMBAYAN
40 T. Gener Street cor K1 Street (near Kamuning Road)
Quezon City, Philippines

When: June 3, Wednesday
8pm

FILMLESS FILMS presents

PAALAM AKING BULALAKAW
(GOODBYE MY SHOOTING STAR)

This is not a film by KHAVN
Starring MERYLL SORIANO

Running time: 73 minutes

K. loves Ana. Then Ana went missing. But now she’s back. And so is K. The walk through the old school. The strange encounters. The eye doctor. The rekindled memories. Chance? Or design? What we talk about when we talk about love are the things unsaid. The words that fail. The lovesongs in your head. The poetry between the lines.

Jolina and Squatterpunk have nothing in common and you’d be right to think that but you’d be also be wrong. They have one – - – Khavn. The teleserye mush of “Gusto” comes from the same place as the apocalyptic gorepunk of Three Days Of Darkness. The avantpop filmmaker has a flipside and a hopeless devotion to love and lovesongs. And he wears his secret heart on his sleeve on Paalam Aking Bulalakaw (Goodbye My Shooting Star). Forget John Lloyd & Sara. Spike the senti. Bittersweeten the punch. Love is love and loss and regret and long goodbyes all the things you want to say but can’t. And let’s walk and talk about love on Wednesday night.

FESTIVALS
42nd Pesaro International Film Festival, Italy
5th La Palma International Digital Film Festival, Spain

CREDITS
Featuring ELMO REDRICO, NELLA SARABIA, & EGAY ROXAS
Translators MIKAEL DE LARA CO & MERV ESPINA
Songs & Poems KHAVN
Guitar Solo JONNY SALVADOR
Sound Engineer ARVIE BARTOLOME
Dialogue by KHAVN & MERYLL SORIANO
Editing RALPH CRISOSTOMO
Cinematographers ALBERT BANZON & KHAVN
Director, Writer, Producer KHAVN DE LA CRUZ

REVIEW BY DODO DAYAO
http://pelikula.blogspot.com/
http://pelikulangsingkit.blogspot.com/

Who knows what came to pass between K and Ana before today? K is, of course, director Khavn himself sort of, the man with the movie camera whom we never see, and Ana is Meryll Soriano, his obscure object of desire whom we can’t take our eyes off. They talk and it’s not as if it gets so obtuse as to resist parsing. Just weightless and hesitant and stumblebum . There are no codes in the conversation to decipher. What we talk about when we talk about love are the things that go unsaid anyway. The inarticulate speech of the heart. So maybe we should just take Khavn’s word for it that K loves Ana and that’s as far as it got. Which then makes this. . . what? Chance? Or design? Date? Or destiny? Unrequited? Reunited?

The Linklater parallels you invoke only to cut a long story short and to peg what can be a bitch to peg, what is better off seeing for yourself- – - Before Sunrise at 30 f.p.s. on a shoestring. The parallelism does take, somewhat- – - the walking around, the talking around, the going everywhere, the going nowhere. But there’s no arc in this first person love story, no fate playing matchmaker, no intrusions from the universe. Only the brutal symmetry – - – the solipsistic economy and delicate equilibrium and minimalist stasis- – - of its POV.

It’s the longest goodbye in the universe when your shooting star burns out, shooting star here’s used loosely, figuratively. It rings more poetically in the vernacular – - -bulalakaw. You call them that because they burn so bright, because you wistfully look to the sky for their trajectories to cross your radar again even after their orbits have passed most likely forever, because you wish on them. But you knew that and maybe you knew that out of having had this extraterrestrial hurt too, out of having the unforgettable face of that lapsed darling afterimaging in your head long after her radio silence, her invisibility, her supernova before your eyes. And all of this is in K’s head. Like the lovesongs falling on deaf ears, like the poetry in the details, like the words that fail, like the wishfully-thinking extraterrestrial hurt it hooks me with.

khavn on June 2nd, 2009 | File Under Uncategorized | No Comments -
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