11/25/2013

Rescue Cinema: Films for a Cause

I am not much of a movie buff, and I do not call myself as a hardcore movie goer. I don't even know some of the independent films in this country - the latest of which I participated was for this year, when this barista friend invited me to go and watch "films with substance" in the Cultural Center of the Philippines.

That date is another story though, but I can note one filmmaker my bookish friend introduced me to - Alvin Yapan - the director behind the film Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa, which we both recognized as a work of art.


Dalawang Kaliwang Paa is an independent film premiered at 2011 Cinemalaya Film Festival starring Paulo Avelino, Rocco Nacino and Jean Garcia; directed by Alvin Yapan and produced by Alem Ang, of which the two latter are Filipino Professors in different Universities. The tale of subtlety, of feminist poetry and of LGBT-ish epic, the film have had its encore premiere in the Basement U-view Cinema of Fully Booked High Street, as part of the Caritas Manila's advocacy to support the victims of Super Typhoon Yolanda.


Fully Booked, Caritas Manila and Seventh Films created a film festival featuring a roster of independent films for people who wished to watch for free, and to donate (in any amount they can) to support the advocacy.

And with that, I watched the film for the first time - and IT WAS, really, A WORK OF ART.

I cannot elaborate much on the film, or give a justified review. What I remembered as an audience is this "Kinukumutan ka ng aking titig" - an opening of a poem by Ruth Mabanglo - and just like that, Mam Karen simply enunciated the opening sequence of a movie goer, fully focused to what is the central plot or what will happen to these characters.

Every minute in the film is fleeting, you see characters speaking, but singing or dancing in the way they move. Combined with powerful literature and music, the movie is so interesting that you want to play it on an infinite repeat. It won't let you rest, it will let you keep on feeling that feels of after reading an interesting poem, or singing the last tunes of an intimate song... 

Yet at the end, it left you hanging.
As I see the young man in gold makeup shed a tear, I was to assume the ending, but I can't. Or I want another twist, but I can't. I simply cannot continue to what Vim Yapan established. At the end of the day, we wanted simply that - left that hanging, leaving the resolution to every audience's imagination.

It was a worthwhile watch. And knowing that you are able to help by simply watching these quality movies, it gave me a feel-good-Friday. :)

I hope that in the future - there will be these film showings that would not only give quality flicks, but also be able to influence the people around us. Kudos for the people behind this drive for a successful event! 



The Help: Books for a Cause

Information Dissemination Duties: as member of the Pinoy Reads Pinoy Books in goodreads who advocates spreading the joy of reading to Filipinos all over the world, I am advertising our drive.

You may go to our facebook page and choose from the donated books that we have, we have a huge array of selections and other prized collections. You may also go to our website to directly communicate with the online administrator and moderators of our online group.
 
The proceeds will go to the victims of the Super Typhoon Yolanda, and we are very hopeful to reach all of them, especially to those localities that are less focused by media and by worldwide organizations. 

[Apologies for the late post / advertisement; but I hope I can be of help inasmuch as I can; even with this simple blog post. Still, kudos to Biena and to all members who pioneered this project!]

11/03/2013

False Reco?

I believe there are no false recommendations in a good read. Yes, a recommendation is subjective in nature, but there are some books that are excellent for some people, while for others... you just MEH about it.

Anyways, I bought this book during a sale in Powerbooks Greenbelt, at the same date that I got my powerbooks membership card~ I got curious about the author because of the recommendations from friends to read his work On the Road, which is also a film available via torrents (haha!). Since On the Road is not on sale, I thought that I may try his other works. The story is poignant, the blurb says. 

So:
RECO + SALE + POIGNANT = SOLD!
Ella was sold to the idea that this maybe part of her matronic reads.

The book was stuck in my office locker for weeks due to many stuff needed to be done... but I finally found the time to fast read over the weekend in my favorite spot - the famous Starbucks drive-thru, Bonifacio Global City. 

"You have to put up with life." -page45
It consisted of more than 40 chapters! And it was about a teenager who fell in love with an Irish lady named Maggie Cassidy. It gives you a background of the events during the 1939's America - the time of Depression, of cotton mills - and of, not exactly western, but countryside setting.

Actually, knowing that this is a love story - I was looking for the poignant parts to where it would give you some fanservice - or maybe the "matronic element" that would bring the reader to the tears. Unluckily, I found none. A facebook friend says that this is an anti-reader... maybe because it will add up to your reading slump, or might make you feel bored. 

For me, I JUST FELT MEH. Like eating a tasteless cake. I wonder why.

But I told you from the start, there is no false recommendation. What we all have is our own personal take to the books we read. 

You might have a different take in Kerouac's craft, but in the meantime, ingest this:
No. Sorry. I am looking for that redeeming point in the novel. But the tone of the story is so dragging and... JUST. NO.

11/01/2013

Not Creepy, but an Undas Read

It's a Mens WorldIt's a Mens World by Bebang Siy

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


I thought this book is about mens, being a teenager, and growing up.
I thought this is about crushes, hormonal overdrive, and identity crisis.

But it is. It is a collection of stories, of confessions, and of snippets in Bebang's life.
And maybe now, I can say that I get to know her more.

Nakilala ko rin siya nang higit sa isang pangalan sa aklat.



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9/15/2013

9/06/2013

Shinkai's Recent Heartbreaker

I love heart-warming stories that cuts deep, I whispers to your soul and made you reflect for the next couple of days. 

That is what Makoto Shinkai's works did to me. His films made my heart yearn for the quietness of life, how one's character simply clings to you. 

I first learned about him through bookish friends, who recommended watching Five Centimeters per Second, a film composed of three stories, all about first love and moving forward. In this film we also see how mass transit affects relationships - from snail mails, to trains in the 90's, then to mobile phones and internet; how a bullet train impacts the film as an irony: as a transit to close the distance and a barrier to separate.

Then another bookish friend, who is a fan of Shinkai's works, introduced me to this:


That is why I haven't been able to read tearjerkers for weeks, I was watching this on an infinite repeat. HAHAHA, or maybe as of this moment, I prefer watching this first and let me immerse in all those feels and tears. And I told you - TEARS! 

Kotonoha no Niwa (Garden of Words) is about a teenager who aspires to be a shoemaker and a 27-year-old depressed employee who meets one random rainy day. Both goes to the garden in the middle of Shibuya even rainy morning, and as time passes, both wishes for the rain to come, so that they can meet. 


With the same quietness as his 5 Centimeters per Second, Garden of Words is another well-thought film, together with its rich graphics and heart-breaking music. I recommend this observation as the blogger mentioned his sentiments on what made this film so beautiful.

So excuse me first for I have to watch this film again - before reading all those other tearjerkers. 

8/20/2013

Of Quiet Walks and Wild Berries

Astrid and VeronikaAstrid and Veronika by Linda Olsson

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Poignant and heartwarming, the novel sets you into a quiet mood, experiencing saudade in the middle of a heavy rainfall. The book opens with a cold winter welcome, it feels slow at first, but as you go along the story, you are slowly opening up - to the slow talks, to the longer sunshine, to the serense streams of the river bend, to the peaceful poems and prose, and to the sharings of the two women - of different generations, but having the same broken past and dark secrets.

I learned about their stories of loss, of longing and of love. Some are of melancholic tone - but most of them cuts deep, you cannot help but shed a tear. And oh, TEARS!

What I learned about is how the old woman named Astrid told Veronika this:
"...Love comes to us with no forewarning, and once given to us it can never be taken away."

This is for us to remember that love is a gift, and may it come in such a quiet fashion, it will remain in our hearts forever.



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7/28/2013

Pinoy Reads Pinoy Books Goes to: San Pablo


Walong Diwata ng Pagkahulog, a literary fiction nominated for 2009 Man Asian Prize literary, is a puzzling book. Inspired by non-linear plots of Murakami, and other authors cited in this work, the book is a surprise in itself. When I first read it, I wasn't able to put it down. I kept of looking and looking and try to solve its questionable episodes (so-called as such since you cannot simply build a plot in this novel) - but at the end, I felt betrayed. Egay Samar left me hanging. And I felt frustrated, since there is no resolution or whatnot. 

Maybe this frustration - echoed with my life episodes that left hanging - gave Egay a clue to give this message to me, as he wrote his dedication to my copy of the first edition by Anvil publishing.

Kay Ella, 
Kung bakit madaling makalimot ang Walong Diwata ng Pagkahulog ng lagi nating pagkalunod sa nagdaan.
Sinasadya ang lahat. 
-Egay :)

Anyways, I don't feel angst-y anymore, or I shall not express my frustration for not getting the ending that I wanted to. For this is another story.

Actually, the Pinoy Reads Pinoy Books is a book club in goodreads that loves field trips. We treat each other like students major in Philippine literature and appreciating the life and works of each and every author. This time around, we went to the countryside~ to the town where Egay Samar grew up - San Pablo, Laguna.

San Pablo is a quiet town, but also famous for its enchanting seven lakes. We went to the most famous twin lakes - Yambo and Pandin. And of course, we went swimming to that huge basin of 100+ feet deep.

No, I am not making you feel envious - I want you to come and do the same. Join us, in learning the book, the author, and its associated activity - the field trip. :)

The twin lakes of Pandin and Yambo


Other shots of the peaceful Pandin


Book-lovers with author Egay Samar
And we have to have photos of us swimming - JUST BECAUSE :)




And photos of sailin' - maybe for their facebook profile pages, haha


And this, actually not for profile page, but because readers say that I looked more of a volleyball varsitarian, rather than a lake swimmer. Maybe I was one of the Diwata?
Egay said that Tilapia is abundant here in San Pablo, maybe that's why Ayban took a pose
The discussion, the gush, and the nails!
And the last photo where we are dry and happy and interested with Orange and Egay's love-life from yesteryears 

Oh how I wish we can do this often. :)
Photos are owned by Doni Oliveros. You may see his wide selections of 1001-books-before-you-die here

7/24/2013

Am I This Masochist?

The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty (Sleeping Beauty, #1)The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty by A.N. Roquelaure

My rating: 1 of 5 stars


The first was... oh. A twist in a fairy tale.
Next goes the WTF moments.
Then goes the "I don't even" gasps.
Afterwards you go "MEH" with all recycled stories and VERY LONG STORYTELLING NONSENSE.
Finally you close the book disappointed at everything.



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7/08/2013

Thematic Read for July 2013

I invest tears in reading. 
A friend told me Matrons do the same. 
That is why in my book club I have the title - The Matronic Reader

The first thematic reading for this year is about the mothers - and because of lack of time, or maybe, I was busy doing the field trips with the classmates, I have a spillover read. URGH.

This time around, to reinforce my "matronic reading skills", I am into exploring the depths of the sentiments of the characters who are having suicidal tendencies / episodes. I am into getting to know how depressed is one with these depression phases, and how do they find resolve or release - by ending their own life. 

So say hello to Laslas Genres.

The laslas girl group started this year, planning to have this month-long fest as our own way of participating World Suicide Prevention. Knowing that this occasion happens every September 10th of the year, we decided to do them in advance and immerse ourselves by reading two books - in Buddy-Reading form. Buddy-reads is the simultaneous reading of the online participants of the same book for a prescribed period, and posting their comments online. 

We were through with the first novel - Jay Asher's Th1rteen R3asons Why and onward we go with starting with the second novel - Laurie Halse Anderson's Speak.



Th1rteen R3asons Why is about Hannah Baker's recorded tapes passed on to Clay Jensen, a man considered one of the reasons why the former took suicide. Speak is about Melissa Sordino's silence and monologues, trying to forget the traumatic experience of one incident that drives her away from her own social world.

Here are their synopses:

Th1rteen R3asons Why.Clay Jensen returns home from school to find a mysterious box with his name on it lying on his porch. Inside he discovers thirteen cassette tapes recorded by Hannah Baker, his classmate and crush who committed suicide two weeks earlier.
On tape, Hannah explains that there are thirteen reasons why she decided to end her life. Clay is one of them. If he listens, he'll find out how he made the list.
Through Hannah and Clay's dual narratives, debut author Jay Asher weaves an intricate and heartrending story of confusion and desperation that will deeply affect teen readers.
Speak. Melinda Sordino busted an end-of-summer party by calling the cops. Now her old friends won't talk to her, and people she doesn't even know hate her from a distance. The safest place to be is alone, inside her own head. But even that's not safe. Because there's something she's trying not to think about, something about the night of the party that, if she let it in, would blow her carefully constructed disguise to smithereens. And then she would have to speak the truth. This extraordinary first novel has captured the imaginations of teenagers and adults across the country.

May the Lord grant me time to read the second book on the list, and able to share my sentiments with the laslas girls. :)