Film Review: HUSTISYA
By
Jonathan Catunao
“Academia is the
death of cinema. It is the very opposite of passion. Film is not the art of
scholars, but of illiterates.” --- Werner Herzog
I am a big fan of
movie critics. In fact, I owe a big chunk of my soul’s nourishment to the minds
of people like Roger Ebert, Oggs Diaz, Noel Vera and Richard Corliss. Had I not
discovered film criticism, I would still be a fan of Fernando Poe Jr, Sharon
Cuneta and Lito Lapid. Had I not opened my eyes to the fact there are good
cinema and bad cinema, I would not be bathing in the intellectual sunlight of
the French and Spanish Film festivals in Greenbelt and Shangrila. Had I not
joined my UP dormmates as they drag me to watch the then-obscure-to-me ‘Silence
of the Lambs’, I would not have known that cannibals do not only devour people,
they also look handsome and blurts out quotable quips.
But if my
intellect studies cinema, it is my soul that engages with it. The moment the
lights are out, everything and everyone disappear – including film critics.
What is left is the big screen in front of me. The characters and their
plights.
In Hustisya’s
case, this is applied. I was not able to join the CCP gala night for health
reasons and was only able to watch it the day after at Trinoma. Travelling on
the bus from Laguna to Quezon City, I scrolled through early reviews and read
some private messages from well-meant fellow Noranians who are not enthusiastic
about the finished product. My film buddy Janna was getting our reserved
tickets and on the way we have prepared ourselves for the worst. “Initial
reviews ng ilang mga Noranians mismo eto as usual daw, hindi daw pulido si
Joel”. "And unanymous ang lahat including non-Noranian critics--
napakagaling daw ni Guy for portraying evil in a humanistic way, di ko alam
ibig nilang sabihin but that we have to see”. These are actual messages in our
inboxes sent as I travel to Trinoma.
Joel Lamangan is
what I call the most reckless Nora director ever. Gusto ko siya laging
sabihang, “My idol is not a pig!” for messing up many Nora films. I know this
by heart. If there is an NFF member who loathes him openly, isa na ako dun. His
‘Bakit May Kahapon Pa’ is a mash-up of ‘Fatal Attraction’, ‘The Hand that Rocks
the Cradle’and ‘Kill Bill’. ‘Death Row’ is a poor pirated version of ‘The
Shawshank Redemption’. It’s a good thing most Vilmanians are busy with defaming
Nora Aunor on the web than researching their idol’s materials because had they
been reading and watching movies enough, they would have known that in ‘Mano Po
3’, their idol was made by Joel to impersonate Meryl Streep in ‘Bridges of
Madison County’.
So we went there
with only one mission. Nora Aunor. With early buzz of yet another great
performance from Nora Aunor, Janna and I had enough reason to get excited for
the movie. After all, if we were able to endure the trash ‘Ekstra’, we can
surely entertain ourselves with the Nora Aunor magic tricks inspite of the
‘trash’ ‘Hustisya’.
The movie was
scheduled at 6:30 pm at Trinoma. As early as 5:45, there was already a long
line. We were allowed to enter at 6:10. The posh cinema house was like a city
engulfed by waves of ants as the ticket holders rushed to get their seats.
There were a group of Noranians being herded by the heroic and dashing doctor
Vener, but I noticed a lot of young people in the audience. Not high school
young but maybe college or young professionals. Except for some giggling
Noranians looking for their seats, one even surprised that, “may seat number
pala sa ticket!”, there was no major commotion during the start of the
screening. (I learned of the minor altercation with security guards and some
Noranians outside the movie house after the screening when I met up with Doc).
The lights went
off. The Cinemalaya vinta logo appeared. The title ‘Hustisya’ and Joel
Lamangan’s name is flashed.
First scene was a
top view of Quiapo area with the giant Mercury Drug electronic billboard and
Quiapo bridge. Among the vehicles crossing the iconic bridge is a van. Inside
the van is Nora Aunor as Biring, looking irritated as her boss’ lover Gardo,
played by Gardo Versoza canoodles her boss Vivian, Rossana Roces.
“Baka tigasan ka
na naman niyan, itigil mo yan”, Vivian warns flirty Gardo. Biring looks
irritated and she is not holding back. She makes sure that with her
uncomfortable wigglings and furious stares, Gardo and Vivian know she is not
pleased. Biring even managed to blurt out some expletives referring to the
shameless lovers. In Bicolano dialect, I think she said something like, “Ang lilibog,
di na mahiya,”
There was laughter
all around. From that point, from that van ride, we knew we are not about to
watch the darkest nor the most tear-jerking Nora Aunor movie of all time, in
the mold of ‘Condemned’ or ‘The Flor Contemplacion’. We are watching Dolphy,
este Vice Ganda, este comic Nora.
From that point,
the entire cinema was in for the ride including me and Janna.
Yes. There was the
evil crime of human trafficking. There are EDCA’s and Imperialisms. There are
blowjobs on the streets and pimps peddling little girls like mineral water
bottles being sold on bus stations. There are the family travails of Biring.
There are dark underground mafia-like organizations and politicians as
co-horts. There is even a priest expecting money from the syndicate to build a
church in Bicol. Dark issues.
But then, there is
that pesky illegal recuitment victim that Vivian wants to starve, "ang
kulit ng isang yan, wag pakainin at baka lumakas, makahawa pa ng iba”
Then there is that
obnoxious mendicant.
That petty thief
stealing the show from Biring who is stealing another item too.
That sing-along
inside the city jail and that jail bully who wants a perfect 100 in her videoke
score or someone will be beaten or raped.
That lesbian lover
who is a sabungan ‘kristo’.
That catatonic
woman who murders her father for raping her daughter and finally joining the
musical number featuring ‘Pusong Bato’.
The John Rendez
reference. The Nora self-parody in ‘Akin na ang notebook ko!”. The Biring
sexual innuendos to hunky lawyer Gerald and that sexy Rocco Nacino look.
There are
loopholes as well.
But when the
entire cinema is breaking out with laughter. When you can hear a humanity of
feet stomping the Trinoma floors. When iphones are being dropped because people
are jerking unstoppably. When the entire audience wants to be a part of
Biring’s Motley Crew, who cares about loopholes?
Messy? I don’t
think so. And I am not the type to insist my interpretations but for this one,
allow me to give my interpretations.
The throwing of
money at the City Hall tower. For me, this isn’t real. This is a dream moment.
Lamangan cannot be allowed to have a dream scene? And the awful ‘Great Beauty’
who is 90% dream scenes rewarded with the Oscar Best Foreign Language trophy?
The Liwasang
Bonifacio EDCA and wisdom scene. Biring is now on top of the world. She stands
at the corner of Liwasang Bonifacio where an anti-EDCA rally is taking place. A
van stops. Attorney Gerald comes out and ask her, “Bakit mo ako pinatawag?”.
Biring pleads, “Bigyan mo ako ng libro. Nasisikipan na ako sa bago kong
tirahan. Walang hangin. Kailangang magbasa ako. Kailangang malaman ko ang mga
lugar kung saan natin dinadala ang mga babaeng ating kinikidnap.” –
unnecessary? Unrealistic scene? Of course not. This is not real. This is a
conscience sequence and this is very powerful because by the time this scene
arrived, we all are already drawn into our antagonist’s pathetic life. In fact,
some tears might have even come out of the audience’s eyes during that scene.
But the film
wasn’t all about dreams and punchlines. Like any black comedies, the punchlines
and the slapsticks moments of the good-for-nothing gang cannot totally mask the
darkness. In ‘Hustisya’, comedy is a medium. Sorrow is the theme.
During the party,
while Chynna was very serious with her new life as Biring’s right-hand woman,
Biring is no longer the cranky Biring when she was still an assistant to
Vivian. She is now the boss. She is now loose. She is now easy. Biring has
everything. And nothing.
At the powerful
finale, Joel Lamangan shot a close-up of Nora Aunor laughing furiously. Her
minute grimaces and the swelling tears in her eyes cut across the cinema hall
like a sword piercing the heart. We have been laughing all the time, but we
were all dead quiet during Biring’s slow motion laugh at the end.
It is because we
are all shocked and grieving for her fate. And for the fate of her victims. And
for the fate of this nation.
As she began
laughing, the Trinoma crowd broke in a massive applause. Janna and I were
gasping and broken. The applause continues until the final frame, the frozen
close-up shot of Biring’s face, her mouth open, her eyes shut, her back turned
against all the people she now rule.
Great endings are
not great because they are great.
Great endings are
great because the movie is great.
Like ‘Casablanca’.
Like ‘The Usual
Suspects’.
Like ‘A Dangerous
Liaison’.
Like ‘Breakfast at
Tiffany’s’.
Like ‘Hustisya’.
In watching those
great movies, I went inside with the knowledge of the critics and the passion
of a movie lover.
In watching
‘Hustisya’, I went inside with the opinions of the critics but with my passion
as a movie lover.
And like anything
in my life, passion prevailed.
Thank you for this review. Among those I have read, this is the most intelligent. While you say you were guided by passion, the analysis has proven to be an excellent guide in contextualizing those scenes, which others have dismissed as unnecessary. Our reactions to the final scene were similar. I think that was a most clever ending.
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