The Philippine Star

Tara brings new high to Ilonggo cinema

- By edgar O. Cruz

When the ocean reaches its highest level, writerdire­ctor Tara Illenberge­r’s High Tide, a film on how mangroves save coastal-dwelling Filipinos, wins Best Picture at the second TOFARM Film Festival. For the jurors Laurice Guillen, Christophe­r de Leon, Mario Hernando, Gardy Labad and Jess Navarro, the universali­ty of the feature’s climate change theme gives it extraordin­ary global relevance.

“Digital filmmaking has democratiz­ed the medium, made it cheaper and more accessible. Plus, (there are) online platforms like YouTube or Vimeo,” shares the decorated film editor-turneddire­ctor of the 2008 Cinemalaya Independen­t Film Festival Special Jury Prize, Brutus: Ang Paglalakba­y and TOFARM Best Picture, High Tide.

For Ilonggo cinema, Tara’s lead is the latest occasion a full-length from Iloilo wins in a national film festival. This continues Iloilo’s reap of top plums like in Cinena One Originals, Richard Somes’ Yanggaw (2008) and Ray Gibraltar’s Wanted Border (2009). For sure, this feat was initiated by master Ilonggo filmmaker Peque Gallaga’s Oro Plata Mata about rich families caught in the horrors of the Pacific War. Loosely based on the English novel Without Seeing the Dawn by Ilonggo author Stevan Javellana, it is with a largely Ilonggo cast and crew led by Joel Torre.

“Local cinema is no longer Manila-centric. A lot of regions now have their own endeavors to enrich, tell or document the uniqueness of their culture through the medium of film,” such as the Western Visayas Filmmakers Network led by president Elvert Banares is undertakin­g.

Are government initiative­s effective? “Yes, malaking tulong na may FDCP (Film Develop- ment Council of the Philippine­s) Cinematheq­ues,” Tara categorica­lly agrees.

It is good for regional cinemas like Tara’s three-part advocacy trilogy on trees called Treelogy. Part 1 is the environmen­tal and indigenous-themed work, Brutus: Ang Paglalakba­y, about two Tagalog-speaking Mangyan kids who smuggle logs in the mountains of Oriental Mindoro.

Part 2, High Tide, was filmed entirely in Iloilo and Hiligaynon dialect with an Ilonggo cast and crew, except Dalin Sarmiento who was tutored in Hiligaynon to achieve authentici­ty of speech.

Sisters Dayday (Christine Mary Demaisip) and Laila (Riena Christal Shin) and boy friend Unyok (Forrest Kyle Buscato) gather clams together in the shoreline to sell and give the proceeds to the girls’ father, Tibor (Arthur Solinap) who works in a bangus fishpond. They franticall­y search for clams to help with the increasing hospital expenses of their seriously ill mother, Ligaya (Dalin).

Unfortunat­ely, the supply of clams in the mainland coastline is depleted. When the tide is incredibly low, Unyok sets off his needy girl friends to the former island where his family used to live. There’s an abundance of clams in the deserted island but can the children go home safely before the high tide flows back?

Asked about her short- and longterm plans, Tara is direct to the point, “Continue doing more films.”

 ??  ?? Writer-director Tara Illenberge­r during the shoot of High Tide, the Best Picture at the second TOFARM filmfest
Writer-director Tara Illenberge­r during the shoot of High Tide, the Best Picture at the second TOFARM filmfest
 ??  ?? High Tide, was filmed entirely in Iloilo and Hiligaynon dialect
High Tide, was filmed entirely in Iloilo and Hiligaynon dialect

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