Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Saturday, June 22, 2019

The Filipino Schindler (movie)

The Filipino Schindler: How the country's former president saved hundreds from the Holocaust

Chris Neebould
The National (UAE)
22 June 2019


In the opening scenes of Quezon’s Game, a newsreel plays harrowing images of concentration camps and the atrocities carried by the Nazi Party. As the reels plays, an ailing president of the Philippines, Manuel Quezon – head of a government in exile at the end of the Second World War – turns to his wife and asks: “Could I have done more?”

The real Manuel Quezon, who was president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines from 1935 to 1944. Alamy
The real Manuel Quezon, who was president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines from 1935 to 1944. Alamy
It’s a fair assumption that most of the audience at screenings won’t know what he’s referring to. Is it his becoming the first elected president of a fully unified Philippines? 
His successful land reforms? His attempts to free the nation’s economy from the shackles of foreign ownership? His war on corruption? Or his leading of a ­government- in-exile in the US following the Japanese occupation of his homeland?

In fact, he’s not talking about any of these things, but about a little-known period in his presidency, one that doesn’t feature in many history books and remains a mystery to a vast majority of Filipinos.

Kate Alejandrino, right, stars as Maria Aurora “Baby” Quezon. Courtesy Film Freeway
Kate Alejandrino, right, stars as Maria Aurora “Baby” Quezon. Courtesy Film Freeway
Thanks to his actions, Quezon can reasonably be described as Asia’s equivalent of Oskar Schindler, the German industrialist credited with shielding more than 1,000 Jews from the Holocaust by employing them in his factories.

Between 1938 and 1941, Quezon concocted a plan with his American poker-playing buddies – Paul McNutt, the US high commissioner, Philippine residents and cigar magnates the Frieder brothers, and Dwight ­Eisenhower, then chief of the US military in the islands.

Their idea would mean Quezon issued visas and assisted with transport to smuggle around 1,200 Jews out of Nazi-occupied Europe and resettle them in the Philippines. Had Quezon’s plans gone perfectly, he would have rescued more than 10,000 lives. He had already built a ­village where successful escapees could have lived and worked in the city of Marikina, and had declared the southern island of Mindanao a safe space where he hoped to settle a ­further 10,000 European Jews. Sadly, the Japanese invasion of the Philippines in 1941 cut his scheme short and the president was forced to flee his homeland to establish his ­government in exile.
Manuel Quezon with his son, Manuel Jr, his wife, Dona, and his daughter, Maria. Corbis via Getty Images
Manuel Quezon with his son, Manuel Jr, his wife, Dona, and his daughter, Maria. Corbis via Getty Images
The story was lost on the shelves of history, but now British filmmaker Matthew Rosen, a long-time resident of the Philippines, has brought the tale to the big screen – picking up more than 20 international festival prizes on the way. The film is currently in cinemas in the Philippines, while Filipino channel ABS-CBN, in association with the Philippine Embassy in the UAE, is planning select UAE screenings soon.

Rosen has been making films in the Philippines since the 1980s, after he was brought over as a cinematographer on a six-month contract by a British producer. That contract was extended to a year, and by then he’d fallen in love with both the country and his wife-to-be. He never left.

The tale of how he came across this particular story, which even his ­Filipina wife was unaware of, is almost as incredible as the story itself. “I found out totally by accident,” he admits. “I’m a British Jew, living in the Philippines with my wife, and we went back to the UK for a Jewish wedding. When we started singing [traditional Jewish wedding song] Hava Nagila, my wife knew all the words and dance moves.”
Raymond Bagatsing, Billy Ray Gallion, and David Bianco in 'Quezon's Game'. Courtesy Film Freeway
Raymond Bagatsing, Billy Ray Gallion, and David Bianco in 'Quezon's Game'. Courtesy Film Freeway

Upon quizzing his wife Lori on her sudden command of Hebrew, he discovered that she used to sing the song on the streets of her hometown as a child, and had always assumed it was a Filipino song in a dialect she didn’t understand.
Rosen looked further into the mystery on returning to the Philippines, where a visit to a museum in the back room of a synagogue revealed that the area where his wife had grown up once had a sizeable Jewish population. Slowly, the puzzle began to fit together, and once Rosen had managed to track down the surviving family members of both Quezon and the Frieder brothers, the full scale of the joint US-Filipino evacuation efforts came to light.
There is still a small Jewish ­community in the Philippines, Rosen adds, although most of those who came over during the Holocaust left when the war finished – the Japanese destroyed the village they had moved to, which was on the site of what is now Marikina City Hall. Although the filmmaker notes that the local Jewish community had some knowledge of the events, the Filipino community had none at all. “I just felt this was a story that needed to be out there. Quezon was a hero,” he says.
With the story complete, there was still one major challenge ­remaining for Rosen – getting the film ­funded. The Filipino cinema market is ­traditionally skewed towards ­romance, comedy and the occasional big action flick. Historical drama is not something the local industry is known for. It’s perhaps doubly surprising, then, that not only did Rosen successfully raise the film’s reported $500,000 (Dh1.8 million) budget, but he did so through the Philippines’s biggest mainstream TV and cinema conglomerate, ABS-CBN.
“It was really difficult, and ABS was not the first place we tried,” he admits. “It took us three years of solid pitching. We’d been turned down by almost everyone else, but we hadn’t tried the big houses first, because we didn’t think this was the kind of film they’d make. We’d been trying to pitch to government agencies and indies, but absolutely nobody wanted it.”
Rosen could perhaps have saved himself the trouble – his last resort loved the idea, and took it on board almost immediately: “We should have gone there first as they saw something they liked and it was settled very ­quickly,” he says.
Audiences seem to have bucked the trend of eschewing historical dramas, too, perhaps understandably given this fascinating lost story about one of their national heroes. The film is already in its third week in Filipino cinemas, and the director reports that it is still playing to packed houses and may extend its run.
Rosen’s next plan is to get the film out to wider audiences internationally. Quezon’s Game is filmed 80 per cent in English, with the remainder in subtitled Spanish and Tagalog, and its impressive festival run at the turn of the year should bode well for international audiences, too.
ABS-CBN in Dubai hasn’t yet confirmed the exact details of its planned UAE screenings, but perhaps the film’s runaway success back home could tempt them to give it a wider opening.

Friday, May 3, 2019

Avengers Endgame shoot in PH

Production outfit confirms: ‘Avengers: Endgame’ also partly shot in Philippines 


Deni Rose M. Afinidad-Bernardo
Philstar.com
May 3, 2019 

MANILA, Philippines — Warning: this story contains spoilers.

Just like its predecessor “Avengers: Infinity War,” Marvel Studios’ “Avengers: Endgame” was also partly shot in the Philippines, an international production company working with Marvel Studios confirms.

In its Facebook page, Indochina Productions revealed that it is among the production companies that worked on the movie in the Philippines.

“Super proud to have been part of AVENGERS: END GAME and also get credited for our work in The Philippines,” Indochina Productions said.



Members of Indochina Productions’ team confirmed in the post’s comments section that the aerial and ground shots of the villain, Thanos, going to what seems to be a Filipino nipa hut or “bahay kubo,” were shot in the Philippines.

Scene shot in the Philippines showing the "bahay kubo" where the villain Thanos retired after annihilating half of the universe's population. Disney, Marvel Studios/Released

It is unclear though if the movie’s stars went to the Philippines to shoot the scenes.

The post also showed a screenshot of Indochina Productions’ filmography, which includes “Avengers: Endgame” with a budget of $400 million and a global gross sales of $644 million as of April 29; and “Avengers: Infinity War,” with a budget of $321 million and a gross worldwide sales of $2.05 billion.

Last year, right after “Avengers: Infinity War” opened in Philippine cinemas, Indochina Productions confirmed on its Facebook account that the final scene showing the villain Thanos, played by Josh Brolin, was shot at the Banaue Rice Terraces.

"Avengers: Endgame" recently broke box office records with a haul of $350 million in North America and $1.2 billion worldwide, according to the estimates of industry watcher Exhibitor Relations.

“Avengers: Endgame” also showed dominance in the local box office as it not only posted the Biggest Opening Day record, it also continued its rampage over the next four days, earning a total of Php937,521,966 ($17.7 million) to date, posting the Biggest Thursday, Biggest Friday, and the Biggest Opening Weekend of All Time, setting yet another local box office record.

The fourth film in the Avengers franchise and the conclusion to 22 films in the Marvel Cinematic Universe has already surpassed the $1-billion mark in the global box office, reaching an unprecedented $1.2 billion in just five days.

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Pinoy films in Italy Filmfest

3 Pinoy film projects chosen at Italy film fest


Mye Mulingtapang, ABS-CBN News
Apr 09 2019


MILAN, Italy - Three Filipino film projects were selected for a co-production market at the Far East Film Festival (FEFF) in Udine, Italy.
"Everybody Leaves" by Phyllis Grae Grande and "The Grandstand" by Mikhail Red were chosen among 15 titles for Focus Asia, the festival's project market dedicated to genre cinema "with convincing potential for co-production and co-financing in Europe or Asia."
Grande's coming-of-age drama tells the story of a Japanese-Filipina exchange student who searches for her father in Japan, while Red's project is loosely based on the 2010 Quirino Grandstand hostage crisis.
"The Grandstand" also received in March the Focus Asia Award at the 17th Hong Kong Asia Film Financing Forum (HAF), a prominent film-financing platforms in Asia.
Meanwhile, Keith Deligero's "Babylon" was among 10 projects selected for Ties That Bind, a program design to assist producers in Asia with potential European-Asian co-production. The short film is about 2 girls who travel back in time to assassinate a village chief.
The projects were chosen out of 95 applications by a committee made up of specialists of genre films. Filmmakers will meet up with over 200 industry professionals, including financiers and distributors, in one-on-one meetings and other activities. 
The FEFF runs from April 30 to May 2.

Sunday, November 25, 2018

Singapore's Country of Focus 2018

Philippines is Country of Focus at Singapore Media Festival 2018


Carlo Mortel
Business Mirror
25 Novemner 2018


After its successful Philippine participation in Busan International Film Festival at Busan, South Korea, the Film Development  Council of the Philippines leads the country again as Country of Focus at the Singapore Media Festival, celebrating two important milestones in its history—the  100 Years of Philippine Cinema  and the  50th Anniversary of Diplomatic Relations  between the Philippines  and Singapore for the following year.
The Singapore Media Festival (SMF), hosted by the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA), one of Asia’s leading international media events, where the industry meets to discover the latest trends, talents and content in Asia for Film, TV and digital media. It brings together  Singapore International Film Festival (SGIFF), Asia TV Forum & Market (ATF) and ScreenSingapore and SMF Ignite.
The Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP) will be the lead agency in the Philippine participation to the SMF, and will bring 30 companies composed of film and content producers, buyers, distributors, animation companies, and service providers who will join SMF-established events  such as the SGIFF, ATF and ScreenSingapore and SMF Ignite.
“We are incredibly honored to once again have the support of an international festival, this time from Singapore and the IMDA which we have had close ties with especially in terms of our film programs and partnerships. This time, we focus on the industry side of Cinema for SMF especially by bringing content producers and filmmakers who are geared and ready to buy, sell, and develop titles not just for local, but foreign content,” said FDCP Chairperson and CEO Mary Liza Diño.

Asia Television Forum (ATF)

The Asia Television Forum is  Asia’s leading entertainment content market which lets delegates tap into the growth potential of Asia’s entertainment content industry for buyers and sellers. ATF also gives  valuable market insights from some of the industry’s most illustrious experts and open doors to potential business opportunities through a dedicated series of both intimate networking sessions to large-scaled ones.
FDCP is hosting a Philippine booth at the ATF and bringing 30 producers and filmmakers to develop, buy, and sell content and films. Moreover, Filipino executives like TV5 and Cignal TV will be participating in the ATF Leaders’ Summit on a panel that  puts spotlight on the Philippines and its landscape as it adapts to the digital revolution.

ScreenSingapore,  Southeast Asian Film Financing (SAFF), and Ties That Bind

ScreenSingapore is a marketplace for filmmakers, producers, distributors, financiers and film buyers to explore co-production opportunities, seek financing, make deals and learn about the changing film landscape. This year, it will host again the Southeast Asian Film Financing (SAFF) Project Market in partnership with the Southeast Asian Audio-Visual Association (SAAVA) and Ties That Bind: Asia/Europe Producers Workshop (TTB) to connect promising filmmakers and producers from Southeast Asia and Europe with international co-producing partners, festival programmers, distributors, commissioners and financiers.

SAFF will feature five projects from the Philippines:

Ani (The Harvest)
Science Fiction, Coming-of-age
Producer: Toni Zuniga
Director: Kristine Zuniga

Bangsa Badjao
Drama Thriller
Producer: Suzanne Richiardone / Jessel Monteverde
Director: Jessel Monteverde

Comfort
Feminist Action Drama
Producer: Bianca Balbuena & Kriz Gazmen
Director: Gino M. Santos

Filipino
Drama Thriller
Producer: Mel Allego

John Denver Trending
Drama, Social Satire
Producer: Sheron Dayoc & Sonny Calvento
Director: Arden Rod C
On the other hand, for Ties That Bind, whose first workshop took place in the Udine Far East Film Festival, will be holding its second workshop during SAFF.  Asian Film Commissions Network (AFCNet) Producer of the Year Awardee Bianca Balbuena is one of the mentors of the program. Among the 10 projects included in the slate is  Return of the Owl by Martika Ramirez Escobar and Monster Jimenez.

Singapore International Film Festival

The Singapore International Film Festival (SGIFF) is also celebrating Filipino films as it brings together emerging filmmakers from Asia and Southeast Asia while paying tribute to acclaimed cinema legend.
There are four short films in competition, three official selection and a world premiere   from the Philippines this year:

In competition—Southeast Asian Short Film Competition
  • Manila is Full of Men Named Boy by Andrew Stephen Lee
  • The Imminent Immanent by Carlo Francisco Manatad
  • Please Stop Talking by Josef Gacutan
  • Judgement by Raymund Ribay Gutierrez
Official Selection
  • The Ashes and Ghosts of Tayug 1931 by Christopher Gozum
  • Season of the Devil by Lav Diaz
  • Nervous Translation by Shireen Seno
2017 SAFF Project Market finalist, Mikhail Red’s Eerie will have its world premiere at the Festival’s Midnight Mayhem section.

The Asia Academy Creative Awards (AACA)

Launched last July, the AACA’s vision was to create an awards program by the industry for the industry.    The AACA has set Wilson Tieng, President of the Motion Pictures Distributors’ Association of the Philippines (MPDAP), as its ambassador. A total of 25 FIlipino nominess have been nominated for various awards, including The Greatest Love (ABS CBN) for Best Series, Miss Maja Salvador (Wildflower) for Best Actress and Ikaw-6 Na Utos (GMA Network) for Best Telenovela/Soap.
The Singapore Media Festival will run from November 28 to December 9, 2018.

Sunday, November 18, 2018

the Pinoy Netflix series

Pinoy graphic novel TRESE to become a Netflix series, but will air after 2019

Business World
13 November 2018


THE new cover photo on TRESE’s Facebook page announces its new Netflix connection.

TRESE, a crime/horror graphic novel about a detective of the same name who solves supernatural crimes often in connection with creatures from Philippine mythology, will be getting its own Netflix treatment as the streaming giant announced that it will be adapting the novel into an animated series. But it will take a while before it gets on the small screen.

“We are extremely excited that TRESE will be adapted into an animated series by Netflix! To be able to share our stories and love of Philippine myth and folklore to the world is a dream come true! Even more thrilled that Jay Oliva is going to be our director since he’s worked on a lot of our favorite animated movies!” Budjette Tan, who wrote the graphic novel series, told BusinessWorld in an interview by Facebook Messenger on Nov. 9.

TRESE — which is written by Mr. Tan and drawn by Kajo Baldissimo — is set in a Manila where the mythical creatures of Philippine folklore live in hiding amongst humans, Alexandra Trese finds herself going head to head with a criminal underworld comprised of malevolent supernatural beings.The announcement was made during Netflix’ See What’s Next Asia conference on Nov. 8 and 9 in Marina Bay Sands, Singapore.

TRESE is one of five new animated series to be produced by Netflix from the region. Among the new animated projects are the animated adaptation of the Netflix Original show Altered Carbon and an animated spin-off of Guillermo del Toro’s Pacific Rim.

The Filipino graphic novel’s anime treatment will be produced by Jay Oliva, a Filipino-American storyboard artist and animated film director for DreamWorks Animation, and Shanty Harmayn and Tanya Yuson of BASE Entertainment, a studio based in Jakarta and Singapore.

“BASE Entertainment was the one that worked very hard to pitch and convince Netflix to pick up TRESE and we are very happy that the people at Netflix were impressed with the work, enough to give us the green light to make it into an animated series,” Mr. Tan said.

Although the announcement that the TRESE animated series was going to be made, Robert Roy, VP for content acquisition, clarified in a separate press conference a day later that Netflix is still working on the series as they are “not going to rush it,” to make sure that they give justice to the source material.

“I don’t think it’s going to be in 2019,” Mr. Roy said of TRESE’s premiere.

“We’ll get to meet up with Jay Oliva and the rest of the team soon. So, we’ll definitely talk about how to best adapt TRESE into an animated series! And it’s good to know that Netflix has also put a lot of trust in the creators and the creative team to deliver their best work. They believe in getting to do the right thing instead of getting it ‘right now’ and we agree with that as well,” Mr. Tan said. — Zsarlene B. Chua


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