Friday, July 27, 2012

Huggybear Presents Cinemalaya 2012

July 28 to August 3














New Breed (Full Length)

1. Vincent Sandoval's Aparisyon



2. Aloy Adlawan's Ang Katiwala



3. Marietta Jamora's Ang Nawawala



4. Julius Sotomayor Cena's Mga Dayo



5. Lemuel C. Lorca's Intoy Syokoy Ng Kalye Marino



6. Paul Sta. Ana's Oros



7. Loy Arcena's REquieme!



8. Emmanuel Quindo Palo's Sta. Niña



9. Gino M. Santos' The Animals



10. Mes De Guzman's Diablo



Directors' Showcase

1. Jun Robles Lana's Bwakaw



2. Adolfo Alix Jr's Kalayaan (Wildlife)



3. Jose Javier Reyes' Mga Mumunting Lihim (Those Little Secrets)



4. Lawrence Fajardo's Posas (Shackled)



5. Raymond Red's Kamera Obskura




Thank you for the photos! Cultural Center of the Phillippines (Aparisyon, Katiwala, Intoy, Diablo); PinoyPower.net (Nawawala); ElyValendez.blogspot (Dayo); PinoyRebyu.wordpress (Oros, Bwakaw, Kalayaan, Kamera, Mumunting Lihim, The Animals, ); egyok.com (REquieme!); KapitanKokak.blogspot (Sta. Niña); AliwanAvenue.wordpress (Posas); OrangeMagazineTV ans MajoBlog (Cinemalaya 2012 posters). Next on 2Rivers: the short films of Cinemalaya 2012. (See all the indie films of Cinemalaya and Cinema One Originals)

Saturday, July 21, 2012

July 21-27

Few things move me more than seeing two old couples still sweet to each other, like that MMK episode with screen legend Anita Linda and theater icon Tony Mabesa. She says that sometimes, she feels that he hadn't fulfilled his promise that he will never leave her, because he wasn't the man he was. Still, he is her husband, and she will stick with him, despite dementia or Alzheimer's or whatever, for the rest of her life That is (cry, cry!) true love! This is a scene from the unforgettable episode of Maalaala Mo Kaya, ABS-CBN, shown June 23, 2012



Saw two 1960s film on TV around the first of June (FOJ). The first was with Eddie Gutierrez, Lito Legapi and Jose Mari Gonzales (who looked like my dad, according to my grandma) during their prime. The following day, it was a Cinderella movie (with Bella Flores as one of the evil stepsisters) starring the great Gloria Romero. Classics!


I saw only one episode of the ABS-CBN soap Walang Hanggan, around the first week of May. It was where Coco Martin (Masahista) and Julia Montes (Way Back Home) were enjoying the fiesta in the countryside. Then Julia's husband, Paulo Avelino (Ang Sayaw Ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa), came and took her home, looking jealous. I don't know what's going on, but it seems that Richard Gomez and Dawn Zulueta wants a DNA test to prove that Coco is their son. Susan Roces knows the secret but Helen Gamboa doesn't want anyone to know. So Coco and Paulo are supposed to be brothers -- in love with the same woman


The heart dances with joy with the music of love. Carla Abellana is the light of my life, the muse who inspires me to be my best. There's a reason why I was riding the Southmall-Lawton route every night, from the second half of June to the third week of July 2012. I got to watch, and grown to love, her, on the 9 p.m., GMA-7 soap Makapiling Kang Muli on the bus TV. In that time of my life, I also grew fond of Luna Blanca and One True Love, showing before and after. Carla will never marry me, considering that, among others, she doesn't even know I exist. So I dedicate Joey Albert's A Million Miles Away to her: "Just give it a try, though I'm like chasing rainbows in the sky, I want to hold you in my dreams and make believe that it's true, although I know, I know that it's impossible to do, 'cause you're a star..."


In Makapiling Kang Muli, Leilani (Carla) has become a lawyer but she still loves the ranch cowboy Martin (Richard Gutierrez), her ex-boyfriend whom she hates. Martin was framed for murder by Louie (Mark Anthony Fernandez) because girlfriend Graciella (Sarah Labhati) loves him too. He had to plead guilty when Mark Gil, son of Silvestre ranch matriarch Gloria Romero, hostaged his uncle Robert Arevalo. Meanwhile, syndicate boss Philip Salvador forced Leilani to be the lawyer of his jailed son Wesley (Felix Roco). Martin and Wesley met in prison. They escaped. The getaway chopper exploded. Leilani thought Martin was dead. Thanks to her new boyfriend Javier (TJ Trinidad), she and Martin, on the July 25 episode, finally saw each other again







Thank you for the photos! Starmometer (Anita). TheUrbanHistorian.tumbler (Gloria). AngSaWariKo.com (Walang Hanggan). PinoySpot.blogspot(Carla). i-TropangTV(Makapiling Kang Muli poster). LionHearTV.blogspot (Makapiling cast). JamesMauldin.net (smiling kids)

 
 
 

Saturday, July 14, 2012

July 14-20

It was the first day of work for Geronimo (Eddie Garcia), the newly elected mayor of Baras town. During the flag ceremony, the appointees of the ex-mayor, Perez (Jaime Fabregas) was taunting him. Suddenly, Geronimo took out a whip and lashed at them! The people were electrified. Geronimo went into action and soon Baras became a peaceful and law abiding town. My favorite scene is when he told some cattle rustlers: "Oh, so you just decided to take home that rope not knowing there's a carabao attached to it!" One of the thieves said, "He has only a whip!" Then Geronimo pulled out a gun and shot them. Meanwhile, Perez has sent out assassins to kill him on All Saints Day. Then a visitor came to town: a crime syndicate boss (Johnny Delgado) who also wants to kill him. More bad news: Perez won his electoral protest case and sent the military to oust Geronimo. A loyal ally, the former mayor Ka Ando (Ruben Rustia) told Geronimo that the people are behind him




Ventriloquist and puppeteer Wanlu first gained fame when he won the championship in Talentadong Pinoy, a nationwide talent competition in the Philippines. He is now wowing audiences around the world in his series of shows in international luxury cruises. On January 12, 2012, he and his ventriloquist dummy Nicolo guested in the radio show Nite Chat, hosted by Tsongkibenj, on 92.3 NewsFM. Wanlu challenged Nicolo to answer as fast as he can. It was a wham-bam rapid-fire exchange.

Wanlu: 1 + 1?

Nicolo: 2!

Wanlu: 2 x 2?

Nicolo: 4!

Wanlu: 4 x 4?

Nicolo: 32!

Wanlu: What's your name?

Nicolo: 64!



Police officers Starsky and Hutch were asking a nice elderly couple why they haven't reported their missing car. Apparently the trunk (the British call it "boot") was full of dynamite. That's sounds like a valid reason. Starsky and Hutch (who sang Don't Give Up On Us) have a friend also named Huggy Bear. But his is two words, first word is two syllables, second word is one syllable. Mine is one word, four syllables



The world is full of zombies walking around, eating other people So a greedy businessman named Kaufman (Dennis Hopper) took over a part of the city and transformed it into Fiddler's Green, a fortress-like enclave with all the good things in life Thing is, you have to be rich to get in This exclusive shelter get supplies from neighboring cities and rural towns overrun with the walking dead Riley (Simon Baker) is one of those smugglers, along with Cholo (John Leguizamo) One of his former co-workers (get it?) was one of those excluded. Just outside the electrified walls, he was inciting people to sort of mount a coup. Bitter? Riley told him, "You see yourself locked out, I see myself locked in." "I'm looking for a world," he added, "where there are no fences." This was from George Romero's The Land of The Living Dead. I saw it on DVD using a laptop in the guest room of a friend's house, June 24, 2012



We take comfort in knowing there is life out there, and that they also know we are here. The space craft captured in Roswell defied all logic and scientific knowledge. A recruited German scientist theorized: The only way to power it is mind control, as shown by the lab experiments with the telepathic aliens before they were killed. My favorite scene is when 12-year old Jacob, the son of a human from another planet, defended himself with his incredible mental powers when U.S. Army Col. Owen tried to take him to fly the saucer. My favorite dialogue is when Owen told the German scientist who stood his ground: "That's the kind of attitude that made you lose the war!" The scientist refused to be bullied. "We lost the war because the Russians betrayed our trust," he said. "It was never a question of attitude!"




Saturday, July 07, 2012

July 7-13

Sociologists invariably look at the show business of a particular country because it best determines the level of sophistication of its culture. Here in the Philippines, show business is a way of life for the average Filipino -- even if most of us never appear on the limelight, those who do have become part of our lives. This explains why we tend to call celebrities by their first-names even if they are complete strangers. There are, of course, certain celebrities who have defied time by the longevity and stability of their career. Who first comes to mind but Dolphy? The one and only King of Comedy in the Philippines, he is definitely a pillar, an institution, not only in Philippine show business, but also in Philippine popular culture as a whole. Why I Love Dolphy, my special feature, pays grand tribute to this iconic living legend. The title explains it all but can never really approximate the full significance of the contributions of this simple man at heart




If a body is fished out of the river, it has drowned and no need for an autopsy; suspected thieves are mauled by the police and thrown in the dungeon (Sounds like the Philippines). This was justice in 1799. Maverick New York Constable Ichabod Crane, way ahead of his time, challenged the status quo. He was punished by being tasked to investigate the creepy murders in Sleepy Hollow. A headless horseman was beheading people in the Dutch farming town! My favorite scene is when Johnny Depp was pacing his room, racking his brains, and jotting down key words like "conspiracy" with a great flourish. My favorite line is "Bible black tyrant, hiding in a mask of righteousness." This came from the nightmares of Crane's past. His mother, suspected of witchcraft, had been tortured and murdered - by his own father





Pastor Chuck Swindoll is part of my life. I listen to him every night (Insight For Living, weeknights, 8:30pm, Philippine time, 702 DZAS) Of all his stories, let me share my favorite, which I heard on April 16. (During that time, I was so blue I look a Smurf; it was comforting to know I could still laugh) In a Christian church, there was a busybody meddler named Mildred. She pokes at other people's lives, and everybody was afraid to stand up to her Then came George, a new member and a man of few words In front of other people, Mildred called him an alcoholic because she saw his pick-up truck in front of a bar George, to avoid a confrontation, turned his back and walked away That night, George drove his pick-up truck in front of Mildred's house Then he took the keys and walked back home, whistling


FBI Agent Fox Mulder has distinguished himself with his uncanny behavioral profilings, so was pretty much left alone to run the secret department for unexplained phenomena known as X-Files. Agent Dana Scully is supposed to debunk it. Their first case together was the unexplained death of kids in Colorado, all from the same high school class. When Mulder was a boy, his sister dissappeared in a brilliant flash of light. Vanished. Literally. No trace. He knows she's been abducted by aliens, and my favorite scene was his impassioned speech to Scully that their investigation is nearest he had ever come to proving it. Why, he asked in their first meeting, do we refuse to think beyond logic and science even when they both fail to give us the answer? Scully was a skeptic, but when she tested the alien implant, her certainty was shaken. It was made from no known material on earth



You know everybody’s talking about the end of days, right? Doomsday will come on December 2012, as some say. Before that, the end of the world was scheduled last July 1999. And even before that, there have been more a dozen predictions and prognostications; obviously they were false alarms, but here’s the clincher – they all have some basis one way or another. The lesson is this: people believe what they want to believe for their own reasons. This is the essence of my latest poem, A Child Of A Lesser God, the nearest thing that Philippine literature has in answer to the Asian movie classic Himala. It is based on a true story, which happened on the Texas-Mexico border, and it speaks in a language that is universal, making each and every one of one living witnesses and participants

A Child of A Lesser God

(Based On A True Story)

By Jonathan Aquino

It started as a revered spot,

This shrine, a piece of ground

Cradling the mementos

Of a young life

Taken away as if in a blink of eye;

She, an innocent child of eight,

Drowned,

Her body swept away

Vanished without a trace;

Those she cherished most,

Her family and friends,

Bore the unbearable pain,

Questioning the mysteries of Fate

Of why one

With no reason to die,

Died

And disappeared;

Beside the River Pieta

They gathered in mourning

Vowing to one another

That they’ll never forget her,

The memories shall live on,

Always, if not forever;

Not long after,

A boy was cured,

Regaining his health

After a prayer for her

intercession, and soon,

The miracles spread,

Far and wide,

And her saintliness

Became known throughout the land;

The shrine became a grotto,

The quest of spiritual pilgrims,

The refuge of the sick and dying;

They all came

And were healed;

An old widower named Facundo

Was delivered from the evil

Of the claws of a malignant tumor

On his lungs, which had grown

Decades after he stopped smoking,

A reprieve perhaps, of good karma

Because he, a long time ago

Saved a little girl

floating half-dead in the river,

the memories from her past

banished from her life

and raised her as the daughter

he never had.





Sunday, July 01, 2012

Joey Agbayani: Blazing The Trail For Pinoy Film Animation

June 29 to July 6

This story originally appeared in The Sunday Times Magazine of The Manila Times

Lola is a beautiful young woman appearing in her first movie. She is not what appears to be, though. Lola possesses a deep dark secret: she is an aswang – the fearsome, shape-shifting, flesh-eating vampire of Philippine folklore.


Then came the Witching Hour. She transforms. All hell breaks loose – and the intrepid director captured it all on film.

Lola is the first of its kind: an independently-made critically acclaimed film: a finalist for the Cinemalaya 2010 — and winner of various international awards including Best Animated Short at the 2011 Atlanta Horror Film Festival in the United States and Best comedy Animated Short in the 2011 Giggleshorts International Comedy Short Festival in Toronto, Canada.

All the more amazing is that this modern cult classic is written, animated, edited, produced and directed by just one guy—animation and MTV pioneer Joey Agabayani.

“I did all the animation work for this short, so it's practically a zero budget film,” he tells Manila Times. Actress Doreen Bernal acted out the scenes of the director character, Manny Opsyons, and “this served as my guide for the movement of the character.”

Hollywood animators use a “Motion Capture device which can accurately capture the movement of a live actor,” he explains. “What we have here is what I call Emotion Capture device, a cheaper alternative.” Composer Jasper Perez and Raul Blay of Soundesign Manila worked on the original movie soundtrack.

The Philippines is home to some of the best animation artists on planet earth – they're in Steve Job's Pixar, Steven Spielberg's Dreamworks to name some -- but in a nation of talented artists, Agabayani stands out.


Most In-Demand


Joey Agabayani is the country’s pioneer music video director – the visionary behind the celebrated MTV show Music Bureau in the 1990s. An award-winning – and today’s most in-demand – TV commercial director, his 1989 drama Kidlat (Lightning) won the FAP and the Urian and became the Philippine entry to the Oscars.

He was still a teenager when his first movie, The Eye In The Sky, which he shot entirely with a Super 8 camera – his parents’ gift to him – won the grand prize at the 1984 short film competition of the Experimental Cinema of the Philippines.


Test of Time


Throughout his groundbreaking achievements is the guiding hand of the genius who brought happiness and beautiful memories to countless generations – Walt Disney.

“Disney’s works are timeless,” he says. That was the greatest lesson he learned from his spiritual mentor. “So in all my works, creative decisions, I’d always choose something that will stand the test of time.”


Brutal Realities


Awakening to the brutal realities of life fueled his art. “My siblings and I went to Edsa during the 1986 Revolution,” he recalls. “It was still dangerous at that stage,” and “we sort of risked our lives. After Marcos fled the country, we were all so happy.”

Then fate took a drastic swing. Their father, Gov. Aguedo Agbayani of Pangasinan, was replaced by an Officer-In-Charge appointed by the President. The Governor, though a member of Marcos’ KBL political party, “was very independent-minded” and was not even close to the strongman.

But the country was still high on People Power. “People really embraced and glorified everything that was anti-Marcos,” Joey says. “There were dangerous changes to the Constitution that people ignored.”

Suddenly, “We have been forgotten,’ he recalls. “What I learned from this experience is that politics is not at all like in the movies where there are heroes and villains. There are no good guys or bad guys, black or white. It is so easy to blame and condemn leaders but the truth is, it really is so difficult to care for millions and millions of Pinoys who are probably at the grade school level when it comes to ethics and principles.”


Very Creative


Born January 24, and seventh in a close-knit brood of nine, Agbayani has wonderful memories of childhood. “Marcos stopped or limited importing goods from foreign countries. That meant there are no longer imported toys! That was very frustrating for a kid. What happened was, we became very creative; we made our own toys, like guns made out of wood, airplanes made out of toothpicks. We became very adventurous; we stayed outdoors and with our bikes we explored the neighborhood. Sobrang daming (so many) adventures!”

That was the 1980s – the era of the Betamax. “We discovered the Dubbing function of the VCR. We taped a lot of local TV shows and commercials and we dubbed and changed all the dialogue to make them all hilarious!”

All the while, “I had no idea that after about ten years I’d be directing TV commercials too.”


Directorial Vision


When he reached his teens, he became fascinated by Steven Spielberg (E.T.), Ridley Scott (Blade Runner) and of course, George Lucas (the Star Wars trilogy). His favorite filmmakers today reflect his eclectic influences: Stanley Kubrick (2011: A Space Odyssey), David Lynch (The Elephant Man), David Fincher (Se7en), Tim Burton (Edward Scissorhands), The Coen Brothers Joel and Ethan (Raising Arizona), Quentin Tarantino (Pulp Fiction) and Guillermo Del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth).
 
A voracious reader, he went from Mad Magazine and The Adventures of Tintin to Frank Herbert’s classic Dune, J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy and vintage editions of Omni Science Fiction Magazine – and many other fantasy and sci-fi books and magazines that developed his imagination and sharpened his directorial vision.


Walt Disney


Then into his life walked the creator of history’s most famous mouse. The young future filmmaker “became obsessed with animation and began reading books about Walt Disney, his life and his works, and how things were done at their studio.”

Walt Disney, among a host of other magical stuff, invented the use of the storyboard. “There is actually a huge cork board on a wall and this is where they pin drawings; and since it is a corkboard they can actually just re-arrange the drawings to fix a scene. Today we use the storyboards during the pre-production stage to help us visualize and plan the shooting of a film.”


Nerve-Wracking


“I pleaded and asked my parents for a Super 8 camera,” he recalls. Fortunately for all of us, his parents gave him one “So I made a few experiments with animation but I also got interested in live action filmmaking. I joined several film workshops such as the Cinema-as-Art workshop at the UP Film center.  My very first short film is The Eye in the Sky. I was 19 then. This is a combination of claymation, cel animation and live-action.”

The budding director joined the Experimental Cinema Short Film Festival in 1984. “Before submitting the one and only copy,” he says,” “I saw a damaged portion of the film print; the sprocket holes in some parts were beginning to tear off.”

It was nerve-wracking. “All throughout the festival I prayed that the film will survive the screenings.” That was all he hoped for – then he won the grand prize. 

It was the happiest moment of his life.  “After this, I really wanted to pursue my dream of making an animated film. I began to work on The Ghostwriter.” 


Collaborative Effort

On a film set, the director reigns supreme, the captain of the ship as it were. What we see on screen is how he first envisioned it. But the final product, after the smoke has cleared, is essentially the result of teamwork.
Agbayani’s second film came in 1988. Prayle (Friar) is “a collaborative effort” with four other  filmmakers from Mowelfund –Noel F. Lim (Ang Magkakahoy), Patrick Purugganan (True Blue American Coconut Grove), Roxlee (Juan Baybayin) and Raymond Trinidad, who appeared in Una Kang Naging Akin.

Real Events


The following year, Agbayani did a short film based on “real events that has affected my family.” Kidlat is “an editorial cartoon,” as he describes it, “a satire about a corrupt politician who cheated in an election.”
   
“Around 1988, nung hindi pa uso ang vote buying or naguumpisa pa lang (when vote-buying didn’t exist yet or was just starting) and politics was not yet a ‘trade’, my father for the first time in his career, was defeated by only 300 votes. There are over a million voters in Pangasinan. It was obvious to the family that we were cheated.” 

Kidlat was funded by the Goethe Institute through Mowelfund, a product of the Experimental workshop with German filmmaker Christoph Janetzko. “It’s a live action film combined with some animation and visual effects, complete with word and thought balloons.”

Joey’s family threw their full support. His brother, film director Rob Agbayani, did the editing. The original musical score was courtesy of his sister – the singer Viktoria. 

Kidlat won a Gawad Urian Award and a Film Academy of the Philippines Award and became the official Philippine entry to the 1989 Student Awards of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, more popularly known as The Oscars.  


Music Bureau


“After Kidlat, Rob, Viktoria and I became active in making music videos. In 1991, we produced Sasabihin Ko Na music video. Viktoria's recording company was asking us what was this for? There was no use or venue for a music video here at that time.” 

Serendipitiously, “A few months after finishing the video, MTV Asia was launched.  We then produced and directed more music videos for Viktoria and others artists.”

Then Joey and Rob got “to work with almost all Pinoy bands and recording artists through our very first TV show - The Music Bureau.  Hosted by Jao Mapa, G. Toengi and Joey Mead, The Music Bureau on ABC 5 was instrumental to the phenomenal success of the band explosion of the 1990s – which launched the Eraserheads, Rivermaya, Parokya Ni Edgar, Afterimage, True Faith, Introvoys, Yano, Tropical Depression and a lot more.


Everything Was Manual


            Agbayani’s third film, The Ghostwriter – featuring the voice of brilliant comic Jon Santos –  makes you want to immediately grab a (hopefully not) pirated copy: A ghost who’s a very talented writer (get it?) has finally finished his literary masterpiece. Then the vampire Count Roach steals the manuscript. A haunted house becomes the witness to the battle between a ghost and the vampire.

“I started working on this in 1986 using my Super8 camera” he recalls. “There weren’t any computers then, so manual lahat (everything was manual). I was crazy enough to attempt to do all the work myself: background paintings, line drawings, etcetera.” 

The short film was 11 epic years in the making. “It took that long because I worked on it only during semestral breaks when I was still in school and as a professional whenever there are few projects. I completed several other shorts and music videos before finishing this short film.” 

Agbayani went to the University of the Philippines and earned a degree in Architecture “Then I became an in-house director at Unitel Productions. Unitel was very supportive. I decided to reshoot the film in 35 mm.”

Resourcefully, he got the unused film negatives from other projects. “I asked for the help of several artists like inkers and painters. But I still insisted on doing all the background paintings and line drawings for the animation.”

The Ghostwriter has recently been screened at the Offshoot Film Festival last Oct. 28 at the University of Arkansas in the United States.


Ad of The Year


Agbayani also directed TV commercials like the famous Ang Gaan Gaan Ng Feeling Ivory ad featuring Bianca Araneta and DV8. “I also collaborated with Briliante Mendoza who was production designer then. We made several wholesome shampoo commercials in the mid ‘90s.”

His first TV ad, Odyssey, won the 1991 Ad of the Year Award from the Advertising Creative Guild.

 Another Joey Agbayani project was the More than the Usual ad of the Department of Tourism. “One of my favorite projects is the Kill Bill spoof TV ad with Pokwang and Tuesday, the Payless Pancit commercial.

 His latest is the Rejoice TV ad with Mara Clara stars Kathryn Bernardo and Julia Montes.
 

New Golden Age


We seem to be watching a new golden age for original Filipino movies. The commercial runs of the independent films in the 2011 Cinemalaya, like Quark Henares’ Rakenrol and Marlon Rivera’s Ang Babae Sa Septic Tank – the country’s entry to the coming Oscar Awards – were all blockbusters.

There is the resurgence of mainstream movies too. Just recently, Ruel Bayani’s No Other Woman is now officially the highest grossing Filipino film of all time, raking in over P2 million even in the aftermath of typhoons Pedring and Quiel. Even before that was a parade of box office hits like Jerry Lopez Sineneng’s Way Back Home and Mark A. Reyes’ Tween Academy: Class of 2012.
 
If given an offer, would Joey Agbayani direct a mainstream movie? “Yes,” he says, but mainstream film studios “will probably offer a horror or genre film.” 


Perennial Favorites


Gay films are perennial favorites in international film festivals. They played a major role in the evolution of local independent filmmaking, according to radio show host Rafael Reyes in latest episode of Heard On Thursdays which featured Alemberg Ang, producer and co-writer of Alvin Yapan’s Cinemalaya 2011 film Ang Sayaw Ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa which is finishing its successful commercial run.

Agbayani is open enough to direct a gay film but only “if the screenplay has something new or different,” he says. “The usual ones are focused on gay relationships and sex.”   


Demanding Director


The journey was full of adventures even if it wasn’t all smooth sailing. “In 2009, there were so few projects and the future seemed uncertain,” he recalls. “So I decided to continue studying 3D CGI.” (Computer Graphics Image) “I've done some graphics before but only with inanimate objects such as landscapes and structures. While studying character animation, cloth simulation and hair simulation in 3D CGI, I came up with a zombie-like character which I was planning to use for a live-action short.” 

Then “After working on several tutorial challenges which I imposed on myself, I came up with the story idea of a very demanding director and a real aswang,” he says. “Lola is really a metaphor about the nightmares of a TV commercial shoot.”

There is a good side, though. “I just noticed that whenever I feel frustrated, depressed or hopeless, that’s when great ideas come,” he says. “The I get really excited so the frustration, hopelessness and depression fade away.” 


Different and Original


Agbayani is optimistic about the future of film animation in the Philippines. “Most of the animated films we see abroad are partly done by Pinoy artists. We have a lot of very talented animators in our country. I have seen a lot of fine works from the Animahinasyon Film Festival . Most of these are shorts by professionals and students. I'm also impressed with the recent feature length animated films like the RPG Metanioa.”  

A lot has to be done first. “There are still very few feature length animated films because the process is very tedious and it is very expensive.”

Joey Agbayani has so much to teach the new generation of Pinoy film animators: “Choose a subject or theme that really fascinates you. If you do so, you will really enjoy the process of making your movie.” 

Equally important, “While you’re making your movie, don't be too conscious about film festivals and winning awards concentrate on your characters and the story you are telling.  In making movies or any form of art, as much as possible try to come up with something new, different and original.”


 

June 23-29


Internationally hailed filmmaker Aureus Solito (Ang Pagdadalaga Ni Maximo Oliveros) traces his roots to a Shaman-King lineage from an enchanted paradise at the end of southern Palawan.  His mother "told me stories when I was a kid that nobody knew of," he tells Janet Nepales of Hollywood Bulletin. "It was a world that was magical and pure." His Busong (Palawan Fate) was "shot with purity," enthuses Swiss filmmaker Sylvie Cachin. Aureus, chosen as one of the world's most influential emerging filmmakers in Take 100: The Future of Film (Phaidon Press), cried as the movie was selected for the Cannes Director's Fortnight in April 2011, amidst a thundering chorus of acclaim. His countless awards and screenings span the globe, including Sundance, Spirit and Berlinale. The groundbreaking film is the first salvo of Aureus' planned trilogy, with Delubyo (Deluge) and Sumbang (Origin). Busong, starring Alessandra de Rossi and Clifford Banagale, "is just the beginning," he says, "of introducing to the world the Palawanon indigenous universe."


Dante Nico Garcia's admirably original Ploning is a cinematic multi-layered celebration of life in his hometown of Cuyo, a remote, beautiful island in Palawan. I find it perfect to see real islanders acting it out with the likes of Judy Ann Santos (Hating Kapatid); Mylene Dizon (100) and Ketchup Eusebio (Rakenrol). I long for a simple life, away from the rat race and in touch with nature; so I can relate to the character of Tony Mabesa, with his serene existence, the great expanse of the mighty ocean at his feet. Time moves slowly in paradise, as he sat on the beach, telling his curious grandkids about life in the city, trying to remember what it was like, really.  That scene is what sticks to my mind, like chocolate on the tounge, when I think of this hauntingly stunning directorial debut by Cuyo's most celebrated son


I met a guy who graduated from Ateneo High School, Batch 1963. He showed me his yearbook as we drank on his chi-chi balcony around the third week of May 2012. I took this picture of one of his cutie batchmates, former First Gentleman Mike Arroyo, while I look at the city lights of Manila and photos of a seemingly innocent bygone era

Moving around from place to place, I can relate to the gypsy life of Sam and Dean Winchester . I've had supernatural encounters too, and oftentimes, I'd rather deal with shape-shifters than mood-swingers . I was temporarily staying at a friend's house, last week of May 2012. Here are two true: I was outside. From my peripheral vision, a white blur crossed the living room, framed by the open kitchen door. Sure as hell it wasn't the dog. I chose to sleep in the couch rather than the guest room so I could watch TV (PBB) when everybody has gone to bed. One time past midnight, I woke up to find a shadow looming over me. "Who are you?" I asked it mentally while building a white shield against spiritual attacks . "Why can't you find peace?" I waited for an answer. And as my eyes adjusted to the dark, I realized I was talking to the electric fan


Almost everything he had, he lost. He descended into the abyss of despair. But the insights he gained were priceless. It was exquisitely tempting to emo in self-pity but that doesn't help anything. Instead, he channeled the energy of his new-found awareness into his personal transformation. He's a survivor, and he has overcome his fears because he has conquered himself

People think he's weird. He's an outsider; but because of his movie star looks, he's not entirely an outcast. If he tends to stay away, it's because some humans can be so ... inhumane. He can read your mind, really intriguing! A boy-next-door-type but not your typical neighbor, he's not like most people. It's not a question of being superior or inferior because that's a stupid idea, anyway . Then again, he really is ... different