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Amicus Curiae

Kuwentong Peyups atbp.

Atty. Dennis Gorecho

Visayan film “The Gospel of the Beast”   opens Cinemalaya 2024

 “The Gospel of the Beast”  will be the opening film of this year’s Cinemalaya Philippine Independent Film Festival will feature Jansen Magpusao, the  festival’s second youngest Best Actor.

Gospel of the Beast is a coming-of-age film about a teenage boy, Mateo, who is ceaselessly searching for his missing father. After accidentally killing his best friend, his life gets turned upside down. he runs away with his father’s friend  Berto (Ronnie Lazaro)  – not knowing that his escape would set him on his ultimate journey towards  beasthood. as Berto exposes him to the drug-fueled and violent world of the syndicate.

It is a regional film  by Sheron Dayoc featuring all-Western Visayan actors that won two awards at the recent 47th Gawad Urian,  with Best Supporting Actor  for   Lazaro and  Best Editing.

“In a world that continues to grapple with various forms of violence, including war, domestic abuse, modern-day slavery, and other affronts to human dignity, the story speaks to the broader human experience—the struggle for justice and enduring hope—through the character of Mateo.” Dayoc said in an interview.

Magpusao   was  then an unknown and neophyte 15-year old child actor from a far-flung town in Antique when he won as Best Actor  in 2019 for  “John Denver Trending”.

He portrays a young boy whose life changed after a video of him went viral and he became a victim of cyber-bullying.

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Aside from the Best Actor award by Jansen, “John Denver Trending” was the biggest winner in 2019 with Best Film, Best Original Music Score, Best Editing, Best Cinematography, and the NETPAC Award for the Full-Length Category.

Lino Brocka’s ‘Bona,’ starring Nora Aunor and Phillip Salvador, is the closing film, that tells the story of a fan becoming infatuated with the bit actor from a movie but the endless infatuation comes with unfortunate results. Nora Aunor won as Best Actress  in Cinemalaya 2014 for Hustisya in the Directors’ showcase.

Documentaries  from GMA Public Affairs will also be shown:  “Sisid sa Putik” of Mav Gonzales,  “Boat to School” of Howie Severino,  “Bawat Barya” by  Atom Araullo and “Ambulasyang de Paa”  by Kara David. “Lost Sabungeros” by  Bryan Brazil delves into the unsolved disappearances of sabungeros (cockfighting enthusiasts) in 2022.

“Loob, Lalim, Lakas” is this year’s theme of the 20th  Cinemalaya  Independent Film Festival  that will   run from August 2 to 11, 2024.

Competing in the Full-Length Category are: Alipato At Muog by JL Burgos; An Errand by Dominic Bekaert and Sarge Lacuesta; Tumandok by Arlie Sumagaysay and Richard Salvadico; Balota by Kip Oebanda; Gulay Lang Manong (No More Than Veggies) by BC Amparado; Kantil (Trench) by Joshua  Medroso; Kono Basho by Jaime Pacena II; Love Child by Jonathan Jurilla; The Hearing by Lawrence Fajardo and Honee Alipio; and The Wedding Dance by Julius Lumiqued.

The  entries , often called “indie films”,  embody Cinemalaya’s vision: “the creation of new cinematic works by Filipino filmmakers“ works that boldly articulate and freely interpret the Filipino experience with fresh insight and artistic integrity.”

 It also aims to invigorate the Philippine filmmaking by developing a new breed of Filipino filmmakers.

I consider myself as a Cinemalaya loyalist as I have been watching the festival films  since it started in 2005, or 20 years ago.

Eddie Garcia won the Best Actor that year for  ICU Bed#7 , Merylle Soriano was Best Actress  for Room Boy  while Pepot Artista  was Best Film  . Garcia was  the only  person  that won Best Actor thrice, ICU Bed #7 (2005),  Bwakaw (2012)  and ML  (2018).

My passion perhaps is an offshoot of my exposure to experimental films during my college years in the late ‘80s and ‘90s at the UP Diliman where I saw several highly sensitive and political films,  some of them were even banned from commercial screenings.

The  UP Film Center  served as a venue to screen films free from censorship as a salute to the ideals that independent filmmaking promotes—imagination, creativity, reinvention, and critical thinking.  Academic freedom is essential to the mission of the University that showing of films is part and parcel of its academic programs.

Named after a mythical bird, Cine Adarna is a   800-seater theater  that has been a favorite venue for international, regional, national, even sectoral film festivals.

Some of the films I saw included Lino Brocka’s “Maynila, Sa Mga Kuko ng Liwanag” (1975), “Bayan Ko: Kapit sa Patalim” (1985), Ishmael Bernal’s “Himala” (1982), Mike de Leon’s “Sister Stella L.” (1984), and Marilou Diaz-Abaya’s “Karnal” (1984) whose daring works portrayed revolt, labor unionism, social ostracism, and class division.

“While it is the duty of the artist to work for what is true, good, and beautiful, first we have to expose and fight for what is wrong.” Brocka said in an interview.

(Peyups is the moniker of the University of the Philippines. Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the Seafarers’ Division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan Law Offices. For comments, e-mail info@sapalovelez.com, or call 09175025808 or 09088665786.)

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