Film Review: DEMENTIA
BY
ARMANDO DELA CRUZ
“Nora Aunor turns films into events;
characters into magnified views of those characters. Here her celebrated
eye-acting, endless and translucent, is a sight breath-taking on its own; it
converges with the northern chill imbued within the film’s eerie misty
seascapes that signal dread always within breathable proximity.”
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Dementia is a thing of
curious alchemy.
There is a scene
nearing its end that simultaneously affirms and overturns its ideological
confusions: Heavily influenced by New Asian horror, Percival M. Intalan’s debut
feature as director is not a story strictly about hateful ghouls, but it is
about hurt and betrayal and destruction. It is not a story strictly about the
haunted, either, but of fractured psyches and corrupted moralities. There is no
way to tell which exactly of the two (though I am inclined to champion the
latter, which is more primal) with an end of such an ambiguous note it poses
questions including one about the film’s own vision.
Numerous promotions
may have posited audience to expect a close exposition on the cognitive
dysfunction, but know that Dementia has not much interest on a split-screen of
the mundane with the supernatural, much less an exhaustive discussion on the
said disorder. It is no The Exorcism of Emily Rose and it consciously means not
to, although perhaps it strikes terrible resemblance to the Scott Derrickson
picture with how sparse is actually collectively known, in truth, of both the
films’ principal characters.
Telling a story
written by Intalan’s husband Jun Lana, known a filmic craftsman (see: Bwakaw)
and able storyteller (see: Muro-ami), Dementia surrounds on Mara Fabre (Nora
Aunor), whose early-stage dementia impels her cousin (Bing Loyzaga) to take her
back home to Batanes — the northernmost Philippine island — to hopefully help
with her mental affliction. The story is nothing unprecedented; how many times
in a lifetime have we heard supernatural revenge plots unfold? The pieces are
in place: gusts that kill candle fire, ghastly apparitions and supernatural
encounters Mara soon will share with her niece Rachel, played by Jasmine
Curtis-Smith. Yet, as ever, Lana elevates the film with a narrative strongly
focused on Mara’s escalating distress, never mind if comprised of support
characters who serve more as plot devices to tread back to Mara’s clouded and
tragic past.
Nora Aunor turns films
into events; characters into magnified views of those characters. Here her
celebrated eye-acting, endless and translucent, is a sight breath-taking on its
own; it converges with the northern chill imbued within the film’s eerie misty
seascapes that signal dread always within breathable proximity. In this
respect, it make sense for Intalan to employ great talents: whether it is
Mackie Galvez (Mangatyanan) on image; and Von de Guzman (Yanggaw) on sound. The
landscape shots are impressionistic views at Mara’s troubled state. The cliff,
for instance, is a perfect venue for the film’s conclude. The scene is an
entire encapsulation of Dementia, the scene that nears the end with Mara
smiling at the wind finally, the scene that is essential to an impending twist
(both a narrative revelation and a final wink before curtain-fall).
For both the film and
Mara it might have been a Pyrrhic victory, but a victory just the same.
Wow copy paste lang talaga ha? Nagpapaalaam kayo sa mga pinagkukunan ninyo?
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