Sun.Star Pampanga

‘Respeto’

- ISOLDE D. AMANTE

I WATCHED “Respeto” with the makings of a Greek chorus nearby. When the movie’s lead character Hendrix suffered yet again, one girl in the row behind me grumbled, “Pagka wa’y ayo’ng kinabuhia (His life sucks).” A few minutes later, when Hendrix walked straight into a crime scene, another individual from the row behind me urged, “Dagan (Run)!”

The movie, fortunatel­y, is so well told that it compels you to keep paying attention instead of looking away to shush more vocal moviegoers. It will make you root for Hendrix (Abra), Betchai (Chai Fonacier), and Payaso (Silvester Bagadiong), who spend their days loitering in the narrow alleys and defaced tombs of Pandacan. It will make you believe in characters with such improbable names as Breezy G. And it just might make you want to cry at the sight of a plastic plate of instant pancit canton.

At the heart of the story is a teenager who wants, more than anything, to win some street cred in a rap battle. It is the closest thing to respect that he knows, and to get it he’s willing to endure being manhandled and humiliated by other rappers and Mando (Brian Arda), the thug who lives with his sister and uses Hendrix as a runner for illegal drugs.

Hendrix’s shenanigan­s lead him to Doc (Dido de la Paz), a seller of used books who turns out to have been a poet in a different time. While they live in the same neighborho­od, their lives couldn’t be more different, on the surface. Doc possesses a fluency and wit that lie beyond Hendrix’s reach; his dreams live in the bookshop he perseveres in running (called Malaya, in the movie’s only heavy-handed touch). Hendrix’s dreams live wherever the rap battles take place, at least when he’s not in the Sweet Lipz bar, where the girl he’s infatuated with works. An exchange between Doc and Hendrix prompts another comment from someone in the Greek chorus behind me. “Ang respeto dili pangayoon.” Did she mean that one can’t ask for respect but must earn it? Or that all human beings deserve it and shouldn’t have to ask? I didn’t get the chance to find out.

How the story unfolds, I suggest you find out for yourself. I will say, though, that the packed movie house during last Friday night’s screening in Robinsons Galleria broke into applause— spontaneou­s and prolonged applause— after that unforgetta­ble final scene. Yet when “Respeto” was released around this time last year, it reportedly got fewer than four days in one of Cebu City’s theaters. How can we expect to see better Filipino films if we can’t be bothered to support those (like director Alberto “Treb” Montera II, among many others) who do make them? Thank you to the Friedrich Naumann Foundation (FNF) for bringing the movie to Cebu.

In about 11 weeks, it will be the 70th anniversar­y of the adoption of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights. One of the reasons FNF arranged for “Respeto” to be screened in Cebu was to call for more entries to its FreedomMov_E competitio­n,

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