The Philippine Star

QCinema reveals the 2018 grantees

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This year, the QCinema Internatio­nal Film Festival (QCinema) carries on with its mission to feature the best of new and seasoned homegrown storytelle­rs.

Set to premiere at the film festival are new independen­t feature and documentar­y films whose narratives speak about the intricacie­s of life, love and history.

QCinema will run from Oct. 21 to 30 in different cinemas.

Samantha Lee’s Billie and Emma looks into the depths of a young female friendship. Billie is a 17-year-old rocker girl who is forced to move to the province. She meets Emma, the queen bee, model student and perfect daughter, who suddenly gets pregnant. Together, they go through the experience of first love and they explore what it means to be a family.

Dog Days: Pinoy Hoop Dreams by Timmy Harn shows halfblack, half-Filipino wannabe basketball star Michael Jordan Ulili chase his hoop dreams. The rookie player believes he has special God-given powers to have what it takes. But his power takes him on a journey where he is faced with the weirdness of his destiny.

In Dan Villegas’ Hintayan ng Langit, a woman in limbo comes to grips with her past. Lisang has been waiting for two years, but her bad behavior has kept her from moving forward. A new list of eligibles will soon be released and her name is finally being considered, but there’s a shortage of rooms in purgatory and she would have to share a room with a man from her past.

In Masla A Papanok, Gutierrez Mangansaka­n II goes back to 1892 when a giant bird mysterious­ly appears in Maguindana­o foretellin­g the rise and fall of colonial empires.

Set in the idyllic city of Naga in the Bicol region, Jordan Dela Cruz’s Panata sa Bundok Gulsuk explores a dark coming-of-age story. A naive teenage boy journeys towards the peak of the mythical Mount Gulsuk to search for a cure for the mysterious, incurable disease that afflicted his pregnant high school girlfriend.

Giancarlo Abrahan’s SilaSila follows the story of a gay man, who, while at a high school reunion, tries to avoid confrontat­ions with people from his past, especially his drunk ex-boyfriend. And so he escapes through his gay-dating app, meeting “strangers” in the vaguely familiar campus.

In All Grown Up, Wena Sanchez tells a story about what it means to help the people you love the most. After years of nurturing and protecting her younger brother, a filmmaker is forced to question her ability to help the people she loves when her own daughter begins to have troubles of her own.

Hiyas Baldemor Bagabaldo’s Pag-ukit sa Paniniwala shows the journey of a third-generation master wood carver in transformi­ng blocks of wood into a gigantic Jesus crucified on a 12-feet cross. The life passage is juxtaposed to a procession of images including that of a 500-year-old Dead Christ. The contrastin­g harmony of the sculptors, the sculptures, and the devotees reveal a customary yet surreal portrait of Paete, a small artisanal town in the Philippine­s.

Meanwhile, Shallah Montero looks into the Philippine drug war through the eyes of women in her documentar­y film, LUZVIMINDA.

For details, visit https://www. facebook.com/QuezonCity­FilmFest/.

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