JOJO DE VERA WRITES… NORA AUNOR : THE CINEMATIC ARTIST!


Jojo De Vera is a U.S.-based Filipino film enthusiast, blogger, video archivist... among other cinematic gigs but is a true-blue fully-beaded NORA AUNOR believer, their friendship spans for the longest time1

Jojo De Vera is a U.S.-based Filipino film enthusiast, blogger, video archivist… among other cinematic gigs but is a true-blue fully-beaded NORA AUNOR believer, their friendship spans for the longest time!

I believe movies are the central art of our time. They bring music, writing, acting and photography together in a feast for the eyes, the intellect and the emotions. Naturally, I get disappointed sometimes, but going on these make believe journeys usually make my endorphins kick into high gear. Movies are probably the most influential medium in our world. Magpatuloy sa pagbasa

BOY ABUNDA : KING OF IDIOT’S WISDOM


HAIL THE KING OF IDIOT'S WISDOM!

HAIL THE KING OF IDIOT’S WISDOM!

EUGENIO ABUNDA aka ‘BOY ABUNDA’ may have made his greatest blunder on national television last night.  His statement may sound as if it was well thought of but after a little while it curdles into a stinky miasma hugging out the best of our senses. Magpatuloy sa pagbasa

ON HER FRIEND ANGELI BAYANI’S WINNING THE 37TH GAWAD URIAN BEST ACTRESS, MERCEDES CABRAL LAMENTS ON ‘LABELS’!


MERCEDES CABRAL on ANGELI BAYANI’S WINNING : "Miss Angeli Bayani did an amazing job on her part that’s why she won."

MERCEDES CABRAL on ANGELI BAYANI’S WINNING : “Miss Angeli Bayani did an amazing job on her part that’s why she won.”

When ANGELI BAYANI’s name echoed through the Dolphy Theater at last night’s 37th Gawad Urian awards, the indie world rejoiced and for one felt great for her.  Her triumph over a respectable list of co-nominees firmly declared that indeed the Philippine movie scene is now being dominated by fresh acting bloods and there was no stopping the trend now. Magpatuloy sa pagbasa

NORA AUNOR’S ‘ANG KWENTO NI MABUTI’


noraWILFREDO O. PASCUAL,  JR. WRITES : Ang Kuwento ni Mabuti’s trailer opens with geography, a mountain range shrouded in mist, those spiritual peaks that lock the rarely seen heart of Luzon. Nueva Vizcaya is a landscape somewhat different from the southern Bicol origins of its lead actress Nora Aunor who was born in volcanic Iriga surrounded by lakes. What does Aunor make of filmmaker Mes de Guzman’s part of the world?

Playing the role of a poor, good-natured Ilocano folk healer, one of Aunor’s tasks is simple and telling. Her portly figure treads through dry shrubs and cuts through tangles of vine. She stops where the water trickles, blows one end of a long rubber tube and places it under a shallow stream. In a province threatened by the unrelenting onslaught of armed conflict, illegal logging, mining and dam projects, will water run upstream and reach home?

These mountains contain and define Mabuti’s world and we are almost certain that she will breath her last here, even as her children opt to do business in town or leave for Dubai in desperation. When she leaves the trail and makes a trip to town, her world is jolted. The killing of a rebel in a military checkpoint thrusts a bag of cash into her hands. What would she do with all that money? Who should have it? We can all diverge on what we would do if fate finds us in a similar situation, but what haunts Mabuti? And how is she haunted? The last questions are important because it unveils the seat of a hinterland’s conscience, etched in Aunor’s performance, an artist’s marvelous and earnest response to the abode of the spirits, the dry wind and the dark clouds. Beyond the question of what is right and what is wrong is a hidden worldview that is less understood and yet speaks to our modern times.

Ilocano folk healers are specialists. There are those who specialize in gynecological folk treatment, sprains and dislocations, and then there are the privileged few with supernatural powers who cure snake and dog bites. Called “mannuma,” they channel the spirits through a stone, accurately depicted in the film, which tells how far the venom has traveled in the bloodstream. Mabuti’s sanctuary after all is not completely verdant; the hills are mostly denuded and the people not all that free from toxicity. For one, we are suspicious of the village captain and all that maddening coin-counting in his office. Civilians are caught between an armed conflict. There is indolence. And dogbites. And then there is death. And more dogbites. Mabuti, like all mannumas, can never charge payment and can only accept tokens and gifts. And so what to do with this bag of cash? In a nation rocked by war and corruption, what money does to Mabuti and what she does with it can provide a critical if not interesting parable to our times.

De Guzman’s tale, like Diablo and Of Skies and Earth, is once again grounded in masterful folk telling and local knowledge. It is charged with mystery and yet carefully paced. What I love about Mes de Guzman’s body of work, all set in Nueva Vizcaya, is how, in exploring moral questions, he combines the timeless to the temporal, the sacred to the secular, the heavenly to the mundane (Mabuti’s grand-daughter is named Kate Winslett). It is a perfect material for world-class actress Nora Aunor whose flowing career has taken the qualities of a river. From the sand dunes of Ilocos to the water-borne Badjaos of Tawi-Tawi, she is the complete vessel that transports us through our diverse landscapes and languages, the unseen realms of marginalized voices. In Mabuti, the actress does not hide the real scars on her throat that has silenced her singing voice. It’s with this shared silence that she gathers us all to experience a quiet understanding of ourselves. You touch the river of her body of work and you touch the mystery of distance and source. From waters to spiritual peaks, what more can you ask from a people’s artist?

NOTES on the author : Wilfredo O. Pascual, Jr. received the Centennial Literary Prize during the centennial celebration of the Philippine Free Press.  His story was about Filipinos leaving the country. Pascual said, “ I thought it was ironic considering that all three winners, including the other two who placed second and third, were all critical of the present administration but I thought it all made sense because we were, after all, honoring the 100th year of the Philippine Free Press.” President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo graced the awarding ceremony.
Pascual is the grand prize winner of two Carlos Palanca Awards for Essay (English) for his works Devotion (2004) and Lost in Childrensville (2007). He graduated from the University Science High School in 1984, where he won in the National Schools Press Conference. He published his novel “Sanlibong Alitaptap” at 24, while on and off schooling in UST, Faculty of Arts and Letters. He also has poems dedicated to his father, a CLSU alumnus in Agriculture and a varsity basketball player.

The Superstar and Wil

The Superstar and Wil

GAWAD URIAN AWARDS 2013 WINNERS : Congratulations!


ART ACUÑA : 2013 Gawad Urian Best Supporting Actor Awardee for "POSAS"

ART ACUÑA : 2013 Gawad Urian Best Supporting Actor Awardee for “POSAS”

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TONDO CINE HARAYA SHORT FILMFEST ON JUNE 8!


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POSTPONED! CINE FILIPINO FILM FESTIVAL : JUNE 26 – JULY 2 , 2013 @ RESORTS WORLD/EASTWOOD/GATEWAY CINEMAS!


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THE GEORGINA WILSON – JAKE ESTRADA TWITWAR : A Fracas Of Idiots


Jake & Georgina

Jake & Georgina

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NORA AUNOR SA CINE FILIPINO & VILMA SANTOS SA CINEMALAYA!


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MESSING UP NORA AUNOR


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NORA VS. VILMA : REVIVAL OF A RIVALRY


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