Saturday, November 28, 2009

A ROYALTY IN THE FILM AND REAL LIFE





Hello again Fellows! Little Quiapo searched over the internet for some Filipino movie classics and now he remembers one of the best local films he watched. I am featuring here a classic of the original Ina Magenta herself (Queen Mother of Engkantasya, the fairy kingdom in Okay Ka, Fairy Ko TV series), Charito Solis.

"Igorota" stars Charito Solis and another contemporary known actor, Eddie Garcia. We remember this as it was last shown in ABS CBN around 15 years ago. Local classics were shown then in a whole week in celebration of an International Film Festival then that was held in Manila (we can't remember the name of the Festival, but it focused on saving old films that are on the verge of full decay and eventually being lost forever).

The film was originally released in 1968. It can be considered as a ground breaking film in some aspects, simultaneous with the counter culture movement that was rising in that generation.

This film is not the typical old school Filipino movies of having very little conflict, having a scene where casts are singing and dancing fandango and having "and they live happily ever after" finale. The ending of the film is rather tragic where we see Maila (Charito's character) committed suicide.

Also, Charito Solis here stepped out from the stereotype of a glamorous Mestiza that was typical for the roles at that time by local actresses. She portrayed a native that came from the mountains up North.

In the original edition of the film, we see frontal nudities not just from Charito but as well as other casts/ extras. It is not so common for popular celebrities of the then Sampaguita-LVN era (which Charito belongs to) to have graphic nude scenes.


There is a lot of unforgettable lines in the film like: "Malice is in the eye of the beholder,"
delivered by Charito herself.

Apparently, this film was made not just for local mass consumption, but also for international release for the English language was used all through out the film (its not dubbed, scripts were read by the casts as they act on it)
.



The film bagged 8 FAMAS awards, but sadly most of the younger generation don't know about this film.


And of course, this film made Charito a legendary royalty not just in the story, but a royalty of the kingdom of Philippine Movie Industry. Although she passed away already, films of hers like this one made her craft immortal.


Friday, November 27, 2009

NATIRIS ANG COTTO (COTTO WAS CRUSHED)



Please do not take some content of this entry seriously, just for entertainment.



Little Quapo was pushed by his colleagues to watch the live feed of the recent Manny Pacquiao in a bar in Quezon City. LQ is not a big fan of boxing, but he said, what the heck, this fight is something to be proud of as a Filipino.

They finished the given number of fights before the referee referee stopped the game and declare Manny as the winner.


In the befinning we were anxious that manny might lose this one since Cotto is physically bigger and ont he first rounds Cotto made some serious attacks and Manny seemed not to fight those punches too much.


At any rate, at the latter rounds, we all saw Cotto bled on his face and had several knock downs.

Well, the lice (Cotto, sounding like "kuto," which is the Filipino term for lice) was crushed by Manny, Kudos!




A MASSACRE OF FREEDOM


Greetings fellows! I know, I know, it took me a long time before I make another entry again. A lot of things happened around and Little Quiapo fails to write something about those but this recent tragedy moved him to at least make an entry about it.


57 people were killed in a massive showcase of barbarism in Ampatuan, Maguindanao in Southern Philipppines.

Earlier, there were reports already that there was a kidnapping perpetrated involving more than 40 victims. Everyone was shocked when corpses of the said kidnap victims were found buried on what they termed as killing fields.


Television news made vivid description of the killings. Guns were fired on heads, faces and genitalias. Even limbs were seen missing on the corpses.


Clearly, its a politically motivated killing involving the ruling Ampatuan clan against their nemesis, the Mangudadatu Clan. But large number of journalists had been caught on fire being included on the 57 dead bodies.

This is a week of mourning not just for the casualties but also for for the death of press freedom.

When are we gonna learn?

Monday, August 10, 2009

PRIME TIME IMITATION


It's been a while again and I believe that I ought to develop a discipline on posting regularly here. I just hope that people can message me to make some postings on particular topics since I am the one who always think of something to write about and it matters that people tell me what they want to hear or read (well if I do have readers yet, so far this blog has no more than 20 visitors, and that number includes me as well, funny).




Philippines is a mecca of arts and culture in this part of the planet. Filipinos are very known in eclecticism in their race, culture and ideas that is why it is considered as a point where the east and west meets. Out of these combination of things, Filipinos are able to create things that are beautiful and considered as masterpieces.

The natives had incorporated art in their very lives surprisingly not just in the Hispanic colonization era, not just in the Malayan age, but far much earlier than these major Philippine historical time line.






The Angono petroglyphs that is situated in the boundaries of Angono, Antipolo and Binangonan in Rizal Province dates back as early as 3000 BC. The engraved figures in the face of a rock formation constitute by what appear like forms of humans, frogs and lizards.

This debunks the view of other so called "progressive cultures" that our earliest people are savages. Apparently, they are people of culture and with a drop of sci-fi imagination, they might be of a higher form of civilization (just like the mythical Atlantis and Mu, well, just a thought).

After several waves of immigration, the nation's culture flourished more through the amalgam of all its immigrants. Through this, a hybrid of cultures was formed.

We have works in our country that can be considered as treasures of humanities and genuinely Filipino despite the numerous influences on these works by other countries. From the Spolarium of Juan Luna that won in the Expocision de Bellas Artes (Expostion of Fine Arts) in 1884 to the contemporary recognition of the works of our film makers in this year's Cannes Film Festival that made one bag the Best Director award, the works of our artists are consistently recognized internationally.




It seems like imitation in the arts have mutated to another phase. Who among us are not hooked over the shows that were originally made by another country and been bought by local media production and recreated it not just with the same plot but almost same everything (name of characters, title, musical scoring, etc).



The story is so nice making us watch it every night, making it the crown jewel of the prime time slot. Apparently, this is the major program that attracts people to watch the slot. It has good story line, good production design, good lighting, good packaging, everything. But is this good for us as a nation of artists? Aren't our writers and story tellers able to make scripts and stories that we can call our own?

It is also disturbing, in a lesser degree, to mention that we not just remaking foreign shows but also our local ones like those films being remade as TV series. Attention: Artists, where are all those creative juices?

Not everyone in our land knows that a telenovela of ours became an international sensation. "Pangako sa 'Yo" was originally aired 10 years ago. After its original run, this "own produced" of ours has been shown in 12 countries in Asia and Africa and has been a success in most of them in their dubbed versions.







Much surprisingly, local shows of ours like "Gulong ng Palad" and "Maging Sino Ka Man" became an international fad recently. These shows, as narrated, were subtitled in English and massively replicated in Fiji (no knowledge if its legal or illegal) and distributed not only there but as well as to other neighboring island nations. In American Samoa, people are renting these CD's in video shops and having short sleeps nightly watching episodes of these series especially "Gulong ng Palad".



No question that art is in our blood. We are so lucky these days that artistic expression is so liberal. It is significant to note that during the Martial Law years, ironically, when some of our liberties were suppressed, artists created things that are not just remarkably beautiful but also original. The likes of Lino Brocka and Ishmael Bernal made most of their timeless pieces in this era.

Let us all hope that the freedom we enjoy these days won't make us jaded and idle. Let us hope that it will be an instrument for our culture to flourish.



Saturday, August 1, 2009

FAREWELL OUR FAVORITE TITA IN YELLOW




Had an early browsing this morning since I got excited in my newly installed unlimited internet brought by Globe. It's unacceptably slow at DSL standards yet this is better than using my flash drive modem that gives a 5 peso per 15 minutes hole in my pocket. I've been surprised by one of yahoo's headline about our lady in yellow.

Cory Aquino, the epitome of motherly love in the presidency passed away around 3 in the morning Manila time.

She suffered in the hospital fighting the rectal cancer that she had a while already.

The mainstream media, particularly the super TV network ABS CBN gave a non stop coverage from her hospitalization till this very first day of her burial. Several personalities had been interviewed reminiscing their glorious days with Cory.

Kris Aquino, the youngest of the Aquino's children made her first media appearance after a long week absence on her programs. She appeared calmer after some emotional burst she had at her showbiz talk show "The Buzz" and her long absence in her shows.

A forty hour vigil in the holy sacrament for Tita Cory's recovery has been started late night last Thursday at the Edsa Shrine. This mass prayer was expected to be concluded 12 in the afternoon of Saturday, 9 hours after her death.

Well, I hope that we can give at least a moment of silence for this great lady who became a picture of hope for liberty of our countrymen in one of the darkest periods of the Filipino history. Her leadership is quite one of a kind, she's one of the very few leaders who collected forces both from left and right to topple a dictatorship.

Tita Cory became a symbol of libertarian causes not just in the Philippines but internationally as well. A peaceful uprising is virtually unheard of before the Edsa Uprising she led.


Handog ng Filipino sa Mundo (Offering of the Filipinos to the World)


After the successful no-arms struggle, its as if Tita Cory's leadership became an international trend. The Berlin Wall fall in 1989, the Tiananmen Square protest of 1989 as well and the fall of the oppressive governments of the Iron Curtain, all of these moves hoped to follow the footsteps that Tita Cory led.

Amidst all of these, she's still human who became subject for public scrutiny. Issues like their Hacienda Luisita and her libel case against veteran journalist Louie Beltran are just a few of them.

After her presidential term, she's still being considered by most as the conscience of the republic.


If Tita Cory was a living icon of liberty as the mainstream media projects her to be, let us all hope that her death won't be a symbol of something that our freedom loving people are afraid of.


Let me share to you 2 videos that best remind me of Tita Cory. Heard these back then after the Edsa Uprising, I was 4 then yet these songs are still fresh in my mind: