Imagine
behind-the-scenes footage from the sets of Lav Diaz, Erik Matti, Dan
Villegas, and Dodo Dayao repurposed into an uncanny narrative summoning
present-day milieus involving police, prisoners and fascism.
That’s John Torres' We Still Have to Close Our Eyes (2019),
which will have its Philippine debut at Daang Dokyu on October 30,
2020. The film depicts actors as human avatars controlled by apps in
scenes that are both familiar and unfamiliar, both real and fictional.
It
will highlight “Future: Ganito Tayo Ngayon, Paano Sila Bukas,” the last
program of the film festival, which is slated from October 30 to
November 5, 2020.
Aside from We Still Have to Close Our Eyes, the other films in the program are Kiri Dalena Alunsina (2020), which had its premiere at Daang Dokyu’s opening program; Jet Leyco’s For My Alien Friend (2019); Manuel Mesina III’s Beastmode: A Social Experiment (2018); Tad Ermitaño’s Retrochronological Transfer of Information (1994); and a 48-hour rerun of Aswang by Alyx Arumpac.
To
close the festival program, we put together six films under this
section called “Future”. These documentaries demonstrate both the new
and the classical. On one hand, they present documentary as a form that
is evolving in multiple directions, antiquating notions that separate
fiction and non-fiction, unafraid of new technologies that break the
dearly kept singularities of cinema and television, and proposing new
languages and ways of seeing. At the same time, these films and their
filmmakers, true to the classical documentary, are concerned with
ethics, firm in seeking and speaking truth, and troubled in their
evocation of the zeitgeist. These are films that are hard to unsee
because they represent both what is to come and what insists on staying
the same—whether in documentary or in our lives." says Jewel Maranan,
one of the festival directors.
In Alunsina,
Dalena explores both the potentials and limits of engagement within a
community that is facing trauma. Working closely with human rights
organizations, she finds herself documenting the struggles of children
and families in an urban settlement severely affected by the
government's war against drugs- an ideology that has led to thousands of
extrajudicial killings of suspected drug users, and has left hundreds
of children whose parents died as victims. Here, she engages with
another family whose child has resorted to drawing pictures to cope with
such tragedy and again confront the complexities in communicating the
violence they've witnessed.
Dubbed as a “documentary of brief encounters”, For My Alien Friend is
a philosophical musing on the nature of being. Leyco uses footage from
the mundane to create an honest depiction of humanity, using an
imaginary alien friend as a filmic device that serves as the driving
force of the narrative.
Beastmode is
a social media experiment involving the altercation of two Filipino
celebrities that goes viral and exposes the festering wound of Filipino
institutions and society — from media and social media to entertainment,
business, and politics.
Retrochronological Transfer of Information is
inspired by the works of physicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and
philosopher Enryo Inoue, this 16mm film documents the experiments of a
modern-day scientist who attempts to communicate with Jose P. Rizal, the
Philippine National Hero who was executed by the Spanish in 1896.
Aswang follows people whose fates entwine with the growing violence during the first two years of extrajudicial killings in Manila.
The films are free to view at DaangDokyu.com/watchnow.
“It’s
been a great six weeks. We are overwhelmed and grateful for the
response of people from all walks of life who, from their screens and
homes, shared in a collective discovery of Philippine documentaries.
Even during this time of crisis, they allowed their minds to wander with
us in time and in diverse territories of the Filipino story depicted in
the curated programs of Daang Dokyu. We hope they found the films close
to home and, at the same time, allowed them to expand what they know of
home” adds Jewel Maranan.
Aside
from the film screenings, Daang Dokyu explores the future of
documentaries further in a talkback entitled “Reality Check: Ganito Tayo
Ngayon, Paano Sila Bukas?”
The
talkback will focus on the impact of the internet, social media, and
digital technology on the direction of filmmaking, as well as on
democracy and the future of our society in the current climate of
disinformation and imbalance.
The
panel, which will include John Torres, Jet Leyco, and Manuel Mesina
III, will be moderated by artist Mae Paner. Digital rights advocate,
Philippine Internet Freedom Alliance, Foundation for Media Alternatives
Nica Dumlao, and musician and social activist Kakie Pangilinan will also join the panel.
Daang
Dokyu, the home of Philippine documentaries, is initiated by the
Filipino Documentary Society (FilDocs), founded by documentary
filmmakers Jewel Maranan, Kara Magsanoc-Alikpala, Baby Ruth Villarama,
and Coreen Jimenez.
It
is made possible with the support and partnership with the Office of
House Deputy Speaker Loren Legarda, National Commission for Culture and
the Arts, UP Film Institute, and Probe Media Foundation.
Others
that support Daang Dokyu are Purin Pictures, Japan Foundation, GMA
Network, ABS-CBN, Rappler, iWantTFC, Probe Productions, Phil. Center for
Investigative Journalism, Sundance, TokyoDocs, British Film Institute,
British Council, SOAS University of London, Concerned Artists of the
Philippines, Adobo Magazine, Inquirer.net,
Directors’ Guild of the Philippines, QCinema International Film
Festival, Grupo Sorbetero, JCI Quezon City Capitol, Central Digital Lab,
Butch Jimenez, Chevening Alumni Philippines, Unreel, Film Geek Guy,
Geoffreview, SineHub, EngageMedia, Greenpeace, Culion Foundation,
Pelikulove, Philippine LGBT Chamber of Commerce, PHCan, Miriam College,
Ako Bakwit, Cinema Rehiyon, and RESBAK.
More information about the festival is available at daangdokyu.ph.
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