Nora Aunor and Brillante Ma. Mendoza |
The Hollywood
Reporter
12:13
PM EDT 9/6/2012 by Neil Young
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The Bottom Line
Alluring scenery and a
sympathetic lead performance help elevate an otherwise tepid, underdeveloped
slice of Philippine ethno-drama.
Cast:
Nora Aunor, Bembol Rocco
Director:
Brillante Ma. Mendoza
Screenwriter:
Henry Burgos
Philippines entertainment legend Nora Aunor stars in a drama by
award-winning director Brillante Mendoza.
An infertile midwife turns
matchmaker for her aging husband in the ever-prolific Brillante Mendoza's colorfully ethnographic but torpid drama Thy
Womb (Sinapupunan), premiering in Venice
competition seven months after Isabelle
Huppertcollaboration Captive contended
at Berlin. He teams up here withNora Aunor, an
enduring mega-star of his nation's cinema and music industries, making this
Toronto selection an appealing box-office proposition at home. Overseas
fortunes regarding distribution and TV sales will likely depend on the Venice
jury, and unless it wins something big on the Lido a future of festival berths
looks the most probable scenario.
Mendoza, credited here as
"Brillante Ma. Mendoza," won Best Director at Cannes in 2009 for what
remains internationally his best-known work, the harrowingly violent Kinatay (aka The
Execution of P.). Hostage chronicle Captive similarly put
its cast and audience through a tough ordeal, but Mendoza is on restrained and
lyrical form here as he immerses us in the unspoilt waterworld of the
Philippine archipelago's south-western extremity, Tawi-Tawi.
A spectacularly big sky, big sea location just off the coast of Borneo,
Tawi-Tawi is one of the country's five mainly Muslim provinces, and Mendoza's
depiction of the religion's exotic but mild local variant adds much flavor to
proceedings, especially the dazzlingly opulent garments worn at festive and
formal occasions.
Shaleha (Aunor) and her fisherman husband Bangas-An (Bembol Roco) are practicing adherents of the faith. But it's never made
clear how this informs Shaleha's decision to seek a second wife for his spouse,
whose long-held desire to have a child of his own has in the past been
temporarily satisfied by adopting. "Instead of cheating on me, I'd rather
pick a bride for him," she confides to a friend.
Shaleha's search comprises the bulk of the slender narrative, taking its cue
from the steady rhythms of life on and between the islands, a sedate pace with
several long stretches of waiting. This patience-taxing approach does allow us
to contemplate the district's natural and man-made environments via
cinematographer Odyssey
Flores' generally pin-sharp digital
images. Among the wide range of locations visited is an abandoned church, whose
dilapidated state eloquently hints that Christianity, while still the
overwhelmingly dominant religion in the country, has receded as a force in this
particular area.
Mendoza's offbeat choice of title, a reference to the Virgin taken from the
Catholic prayer "Hail Mary," ties in with this aspect of the story.
But Burgos' script only touches superficially on potentially tricky matters of
faith and religion, and it's never clear what's going on when the Tawi-Tawi
tranquility is shattered by the occasional appearance of gun-toting guerillas.
Further frustrations mar the crucial final act, after a beautifully demure and
surprisingly willing partner for Bangas-As emerges in the form of Mersila (Lovi Poe) with negative consequences for the self-sacrificing
Shaleha ("for my husband's happiness I'd do anything").
Fifty-nine-year-old Aunor's 170-film career dates back to the 1960s, including
collaborations with colossal figures of Philippine cinema such as Lino Brocka and Gerardo
de Leon. And her elfin features, so
powerfully expressive of both happiness and sorrow, help make Shahela an
engaging, unlikely heroine here. It's a shame, then, that her character is
ultimately somewhat ill-served by Burgos and Mendoza's overall design,
especially in the underdeveloped finale which concludes on an ironic but
naggingly unsatisfying note just as things are about to get much more interesting.
Venue: Venice Film Festival
(Competition), September 6, 2012.
Production company: Center Stage Productions
Cast: Nora Aunor, Bembol Rocco, Mercedes Cabral, Lovi Poe
Director: Brillante Ma. Mendoza
Screenwriter: Henry Burgos
Executive producers: Brillante Ma. Mendoza, Melvin Mangada, Jaime Santiago
Director of photography: Odyssey Flores
Production designer: 'Dante Mendoza' (i.e. Brillante Ma. Mendoza)
Music: Teresa Barrozo
Editor: Kats Serraon
Production company: Center Stage Productions
Cast: Nora Aunor, Bembol Rocco, Mercedes Cabral, Lovi Poe
Director: Brillante Ma. Mendoza
Screenwriter: Henry Burgos
Executive producers: Brillante Ma. Mendoza, Melvin Mangada, Jaime Santiago
Director of photography: Odyssey Flores
Production designer: 'Dante Mendoza' (i.e. Brillante Ma. Mendoza)
Music: Teresa Barrozo
Editor: Kats Serraon
Sales
agent: Center Stage Productions, Mandaluyong City, The Philippines
No MPAA rating, 105 minutes
No MPAA rating, 105 minutes
Filipino independent film “Thy Womb” has received an almost-ten minute long standing ovation at the 69th Venice International Film Festival.
ReplyDeleteDirector Brillante Mendoza and Superstar Nora Aunor were overwhelmed to know that critics at the film festival loved their film.
Aunor, who plays a Badjao midwife coping with her infertility, is competing for best actress in the film fest.
“Thy Womb” is the only Filipino movie among the 18 films competing for the Golden Lion Trophy.