Business World

Children of the mist

- By Noel Vera Hamog Directed by Ralston Jover

RALSTON JOVER’S Hamog ( Haze, 2015) starts appropriat­ely enough with just that: a thick cloud hovering low over humid Manila canals. The camera (presumably mounted on a drone) glides towards and rises over a huge sewer pipe lined with cardboard, on which the homeless young lie sleeping.

This is Jover straying into a genre (the urban underaged poor) that has produced a number of powerful films: Hector Babenco’s Pixote, Vittorio de Sica’s Shoeshine, Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Nobody Knows, and, above all, Luis Bunuel’s savagely great Los Olvidados.

The Philippine­s has struggled to produce an equivalent and has not quite succeeded in my opinion, though Jover’s debut feature

Bakal Boys (still to my mind his best work to date) is a fine attempt.

This film isn’t as good — it doesn’t have that first feature’s directness or simplicity or plainspoke­n poetry — but that may partly be because this is more inordinate­ly ambitious hence doomed to experience failure; its courage should be recognized.

The plot proper starts out with the aforementi­oned boys’ attempt to steal from taxi driver Danny (OJ Mariano) then splits into two separate threads: the first follows Rashid (Zaijan Jaranilla) as he mourns one of their own: Moy (Bon Andrew Lentejas) who was hit by a speeding minivan while evading pursuit. Rashid feels he has to give his “brod” a proper burial, and finds out (much as the eponymous character did in Laszlo Nemes’s Son of

Saul) that a burial isn’t an easy feat to accomplish, not in a concentrat­ion camp, not as a homeless kid in the streets of Manila.

Rashid hustles, begs, steals. At one point you have to ask: Why is he doing this? Jover doesn’t provide easy answers but two come to mind: Moy was a friend and a friend on streets where people turn on you more often than help you is gold; Moy’s death was an opportunit­y for Rashid to throw himself into a quest, any quest, and this is also gold — better than endless days of sniffing glue, hustling for money to buy glue. The second story’s more interestin­g and more problemati­c. Jinky (Therese Malvar) is caught by Danny; he drags her to the police, to social services, then to her home where he discovers a loud slatternly woman with a half dozen kids and zero interest in getting her daughter back. Now (slight implausibl­e turn of events here) he reluctantl­y volunteers to take her home as a housemaid.

For every narrative developmen­t that appears outlandish (his wife enjoys an open relationsh­ip with another man), Jover adds one that lands surprising­ly right (the wife’s boyfriend openly and continuall­y prepositio­ns Jinky); for every character trait that feels ill-prepared (the wife does a sudden about-turn, offers Jinky a home), we see one that strikes us as eerily honest (Danny refuses to have sex with Jinky or his wife; thanks to his odd domestic situation he seems to have given up sex altogether).

Perhaps Jover needed to do a few more drafts of the script, perhaps he needed a longer format to introduce each twisted detail properly, perhaps he needed to work on his tone (A black comedy?). All that said Hamog is not vaporous; there’s enough ideas here for two and a half films, maybe three. A handful of those ideas stay with you, like a troublesom­e girl who refuses to fit anywhere no matter how hard you try. MTRCB RATING: R-17

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