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19 Pinoy films in Busan film fest

Special section marks 100 years of Philippine cinema

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NINETEEN Filipino films have made their way to South Korea’s 23rd Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival (BIFF) as Philippine­s is the festival’s Country of Focus, marking 100 years of Philippine Cinema.

The BIFF runs from Oct. 4 to 13.

“We cannot stress how great of an honor it is to be selected as the Country of Focus in Busan in time for our centennial... being the Country of Focus mean greater exposure for our filmmakers and more platforms for us to showcase this work,” Mary Liza Dino, chairperso­n and CEO of the Film Developmen­t Council of the Philippine­s (FDCP) said in a press release.

Of the 19 films, 10 are featured in the festival’s special retrospect­ive program. Entitled “Cinema as a Response to the Nation” the lineup includes A Portrait of the Artist as Filipino

(1965) by Lamberto V. Avellana, Ganito Kami Noon, Paano Kayo Ngayon? (1976) by Eddie Romero, Tatlong Taong Walang Diyos by Mario O’Hara (1976), Ang Panday (1980) by Fernando Poe, Jr., Cain at Abel (1982) by Lino Brocka, Moral (1982) by Marilou Diaz-Abaya, Himala by Ishmael Bernal (1982), Bayaning 3rd World (2000) by Mike de Leon, Dekada ’70 (2002) by Chito S. Roño, and Ang Damgo ni Eleuteria (2010) by Remton Siega Zuasola.

“[When choosing the films] we asked the question, ‘which films broke boundaries in the period it was created?’ It was, at the very core, how we chose our films,” Tito G. Valiente, an educator and a member of the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino (MPP), told the media during a press conference on Oct. 2 at Max’s Restaurant in Quezon City.

“This was hard because we are condensing the 100 years of Philippine cinema in 10 films,” said Teddy Co, director and a commission­er at the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA).

Mr. Co bemoaned the fact that much of the country’s cinematic history was lost during the Second World War and to poor storage, which limited their scope to post-war films, this even though the Philippine­s has produced more than 10,000 films since the release of the first Filipino full-length film, Dalagang Bukid by Jose Nepomuceno in 1919.

The retrospect­ive will be accompanie­d by a talk titled “Spotlight: Philippine­s, Cinema Centennial Talks” featuring actors Christophe­r de Leon (who starred in Cain at Abel, Ganito Kami Noon, Paano Kayo Ngayon?, Dekada ’70, and Tatlong Taong Walang Diyos), Joel Torre (Bayaning 3rd World), Sandy Andolong (Moral), and Piolo Pascual (Dekada ’70).

Aside from the 10 films presented in the retrospect­ive, nine films are included in the festival’s A Window on Asian Cinema Section. These are Citizen Jake

(2018) by Mike de Leon, Alpha: The Right to Kill (2018) by Brillante Ma. Mendoza, The Eternity Between Seconds (2018) by

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