The Philippine Star

A BL that happened by chance

- By JERRY DONATO

“If there’s an opportunit­y to tell a story, no matter what (the) platform (is) and given the circumstan­ce is right, I’m just fine with it.”

That was Adolf Alix Jr. sharing his thoughts in directing a material during an interview with The STAR. Proof to that is the presence of his works Unlocked and Happenstan­ce in the streaming (subscripti­on video-on-demand) platform GagaOOLala. It also goes to show Adolf’s relevance and resilience to the changing landscape of content production and distributi­on. He has successful­ly crossed over from film to TV and now to the streaming platform.

“You should know the material,” said Adolf of handling narratives with an LGBT theme. “In every story, whether it is about heterosexu­al or LGBT (homosexual) material, dapat tama din yung portrayal ng kahit anong gender (the gender portrayal should be correct). Wala naman akong extra preparatio­n. Ang hinahanap ko lang siguro ay yung tamang istorya na makakapag-respond ako (Perhaps, I’m just looking for a story that I can respond), like for example, Happenstan­ce.”

Adolf reflected on what other possible stories he could tell and add to the existing Boys Love (BL)-genre content, whose popularity was seen during the pandemic. The answer manifested itself when the director read an online article “about this person na naglilinis ng house nila (who was cleaning their house) during quarantine and saw a letter in the ceiling,” Adolf recalled. “The person read it and (found out that) the letter was about an unrequited love. I told myself that it was a good material.”

Due to perhaps chance or creative proximity and connection, GagaOOLala, also the platform that carries his anthology Unlocked, asked Adolf for another material. Then he offered the story about two persons named Wade and Jose Manuel from different but intersecti­ng timelines, 1974 and 2020. They are connected by letters and are seen by each other through a mirror, shared Adolf. The culprit for such phenomenon is a supermoon. The narrative is now known as Happenstan­ce.

“(It) has been there (since) time immemorial,” said Adolf of the genre called BL, which might have been categorize­d under gay films before. In fact, he has also done gay-themed and related-to-BL works like Daybreak, Imoral, Muli and 4 Days. Adolf collaborat­ed with screenwrit­er Jerry Gracio in Happenstan­ce. The series, also set against martial law, suggests that “the struggle of LGBTQ relationsh­ip ay matagal na, hindi ito (nangyari) sa ngayon lang.” This particular milieu functions as a device to serve that purpose. Again, it is represente­d by the gay characters. One is an activist, whose father, a military man, cannot accept his son’s activism and (kind of) relationsh­ip, said Adolf. With that, there’s also a space to somehow remind the younger Pinoy generation about martial law, which they usually encounter in reading textbooks and attending lectures. However, Happenstan­ce presents discourses that love defies time and gender as a construct.

“The label the society that gives you doesn’t necessaril­y mean that it’s you,” said Adolf. “You just have (to be true to) what you feel.”

After Happenstan­ce, the director has another project in the pipeline for GagaOOLala.

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 ??  ?? Happenstan­ce, directed by Adolf Alix Jr., is about Wade and Jose Manuel, who come from two different timelines but are magically connected by letters and love.
Happenstan­ce, directed by Adolf Alix Jr., is about Wade and Jose Manuel, who come from two different timelines but are magically connected by letters and love.

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