Author Topic: The Peque Gallaga Thread  (Read 124461 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline celinokyle

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Apprentice
  • *
  • Posts: 7
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #540 on: Jun 02, 2008 at 06:56 PM »
Just seen Oro Plata Mata for the first time. This is a great film. Now I have to see Scorpio Nights. Many say this is Peque's better film, compared to Oro.

Offline RMN

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • DVD Guru
  • ****
  • Posts: 1,312
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #541 on: Jun 06, 2008 at 05:02 PM »
Been wondering 'bout the words used by Joey Reyes in his script for Oro. Like, for example, bapor over barko; pulo over isla. There are others in film, am sure, if I paid closer attention.

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #542 on: Jun 06, 2008 at 05:50 PM »
The complete masterprint with original subs shown at MIFF in 1983 is still housed at the archive of Abs-Cbn.

Mario Taguiwalo former Dept of Health Secretary during the time of Cory was credited and collaborated with Peque on the story line of ORO. He was also Peque's buddy and played the town mayor in MISTERYO SA TUWA.

Joey Reyes should be commended also for writing the script of ORO which Ricky Lee turned down.
« Last Edit: Jun 06, 2008 at 05:53 PM by keating »

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #543 on: Jun 10, 2008 at 05:51 PM »
From the man himself.....fresh from my email!  ;)

I'm a little wary of giving any kind of top ten lists of filipino films, precisely
because in a way, there is a kind of criticism implied on my fellow directors
and colleagues, which I think should be avoided like the plague.
 
However, let me answer your question in another way... there are certain
films that provided me with wonder, that made me question my life or want
to change my life; and there are films that, while watching, made me envious
and want to shoot something like that, or tell a story exactly in that way. These
films are: "Tinimbang Ka" by Lino, because it captured the little details of living
in a small rural community (not to mention that Laurice Guillen sitting in the car
and drinking in the sight of half-naked boys jumping into the river from the bridge
is one of the most sensual and "true" moments of Filipino cinema). "Manila by
Night" by Ishmael (I don't believe that there exists a movie called City After Dark) because
it really is a love song to the Manila I know. "Banta Ng Kahapon" of Eddie, which is
a more successful portrayal of an alpha male who is scared to death and has nowhere
to turn... it is totally superior to Jaguar which basically deals with the same theme plus
the performance of Roderick Paulate was truly amazing. And of course, the two
masterpieces of Celso Kid: "Nympha" and "Burlesk Queen". Nympha captured the
essence of sexual longing and lust while capturing the sensual elements of bed,
banig, flesh, sweat and hot Manila afternoons. That movie, more than anything, was
instrumental in my wanting to be a director, or rather, to become more personal in
my directing. And of course, the complete audacity of Burlesk Queen blew me away.
"Ganito Kami Noon" left me very unsatisfied but totally filled me up with the possibility
of showing the richness and cultural diversity (especially through images) of our past.


« Last Edit: Jun 10, 2008 at 05:59 PM by keating »

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #544 on: Jun 29, 2008 at 02:13 AM »


Poster ad of BINHI, Peque Gallaga's directorial debut in collaboration with Butch Perez released May 25, 1973. The man is praying that the 35mm print of this film will be buried and lost forever.  ;D
« Last Edit: Jun 29, 2008 at 02:14 AM by keating »

Offline RMN

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • DVD Guru
  • ****
  • Posts: 1,312
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #545 on: Aug 11, 2008 at 12:15 PM »
FROM PHILIPPINE STAR - Peque Gallaga: The director as raconteur
By Bibsy M. Carballo
Saturday, August 9, 2008

Whenever the name of Peque Gallaga is mentioned, the various
reactions one gets could either be of awe, intimidation, dismissal,
or unmitigated worship. Although he has followed a number of career
paths (teacher, director for commercials, actor, director for
television, production designer, director for movies, director for
theater, screenwriter) Peque seems to be best known as a director and
a teacher.

His interviews are almost like a storytelling session cum lecture
where one is given the forward, the background of the subject at
hand, and examples to stress his point, punctuated by colorful
cusswords. No wonder his workshops are often the talk of the town,
and students flock to them especially those in Bacolod where he
grudgingly admits he heads a sort of Negrense mafia or what he calls
the "cultural sacadas."

He has been teaching for more than 30 years, in schools, in non-
classroom setups, holding workshops from Cagayan de Oro, Panay and
all the way to Batangas, recently in Baguio with students from Abra
to the Cordilleras. He declares he loves the interaction, the sense
of community and continuity.

The director looms large (literally and otherwise) on the horizon of
Philippine cinema once a pioneer in Asia and today lingering on a
deathbed. In many ways, Peque must feel it is actually the fault of
those in the industry, born out of laziness and greediness. He
acknowledges industry people have gotten old, don't have their pulse
on the audience. "Many of our producers haven't taken the LRT, are
hardly aware of YouTube, the blogging phenomenon or know how to
handle the videos in their cellphones. So they continue propping up
the old creaking formulas with more of the same stuff that hasn't
worked in decades. If that isn't insanity, I don't know what is."

We wonder if he has given up on the movies. "Yes, I've given up on
Industry movies. But to be fair, the Industry has given up on me as
well."

In a published interview regarding why he did his last film Pinoy
Blonde, Peque reveals it was really out of frustration with the way
his colleagues present the Philippines in clichés — the poor peasants
eating kamote, the farmers in camisa chino, Pinoy children talking in
singsong patterns reminiscent of Shirley Temple, and worst of all "
If you check out most of what is considered good acting by our most
prestigious award-giving bodies, you will see a direct line between
the acting of Vivian Leigh and Leslie Howard in Gone with the Wind as
filtered through Lino Brocka, and it continues to this very moment.
All these serious, solemn scenes between two people both gazing at
the horizon and staying firmly within the frame."

We ask him if he thinks he has a better picture than Oro, Plata, Mata
(his second directorial assignment after Binhi co-directed with Butch
Perez) and he answers,

"I think Virgin Forest, Unfaithful Wife, Scorpio Nights, Magic Temple
and Kingdom, Isang Taon Walang Diyos (Wakwak), Tiyanak, Gangland and
Pinoy Blonde are a lot better than Oro. A lot of the sequences from
Shake, Rattle & Roll are better constructed and directed."

Considering the complexity, ambition and limitations in the shooting
of Oro, he will concede it was a pretty great job but adds it is not
a complete picture, "There's about one hour and a half of story
that's missing in there. There's stuff there that doesn't make sense
or, if it does, it doesn't receive the concentration and focus it
deserved. I'd give my right arm for a chance to do a director's cut
on that."

He is now making an appearance in the indie film Hubad, which will be
screened again on Aug. 15, 6 p.m. at the CCP Dream Theatre. Here, he
plays the director of a play where the actors (Irma Adlawan and Nonie
Buencamino) must deal honestly with their growing sexual attraction
to one another and with the artistic problems of an actor both with
honesty. Asked why he accepted the acting assignment which meant he
would commute between Manila and Bacolod he replies he found the
project intelligent and ambitious and welcomes the opportunity to
give up artistic control of a project and put himself totally in the
hands of someone else.

He has done less than a dozen acting roles and confesses to knowing
his limitations stating that, "I make sure that whoever is offering
me a role knows exactly what he's getting from me. So I warn them
that I have absolutely no brains for memorizing — it all went the way
of my virginity during the psychedelic years — I can't memorize
Tagalog, Ilonggo or English if my life depended on it….I ask them not
to give me kilometric lines and, short of directing my scene, beg
them to cover my scene with as many shots as possible so I can
memorize and deliver my dialogue line by line."

We visited the Hubad set and true enough found idiot sheets
everywhere for Peque.

"I'm proud to have done bits and extra appearances from Mario O'Hara
to Maryo J; from Marilou to Laurice and the only bastards who totally
ignored me and shot me totally tuhog were Mario O'Hara and Denisa and
Mark. I remember having to memorize this huge speech in Majayjay for
a whole week because I had a feeling that Mario would double-cross me
and tuhog that speech which he ended up doing. He did the same thing
to me in some telemovie on San Lorenzo Ruiz and I remember hiding my
cue cards behind religious statues and props. When I did the
refectory scene in Rizal for Marilou, my cue card was right under the
ham that I was eating."

Denisa and her co-director Mark Gary are ecstatic over Peque's
acceptance of the role. Not only was he most cooperative in terms of
fee, assistance in promoting the films, moral and artistic support,
his presence in the picture has undeniably given it a bigness it
deserves.

The best thing about Peque Gallaga is that he shuts his mouth off,
doesn't mince any words, and gives opinions with all those added
invectives that a more showbiz type of individual would be careful of
uttering. He gives kilometric answers to a one line query which we
absolutely enjoy since it provides one with a peek into the man's
personality, not to mention making the interviewer's job so much
easier. This, plus his talent as raconteur.

When we ask him to comment on film adaptations from other literary
forms, he articulates in his usual amusing classroom lecture manner —
"All movies proceed from a cinematic idea and principle — you really
have to write it from scratch. The storytelling in cinema is
completely antithetical to the storytelling on stage or in a book.
This is basically my fight with a lot of movies here — they're really
not very cinematic. I know many people feel that I'm blasphemous when
I consider (Lino) Brocka a better dramatist than filmmaker."

Not that Peque is unaware of people's reactions to his candid
opinions, and we have a feeling that he has lately tried to edit
himself but then too much editing would rob him of that roughish
charm. People seem to enjoy subjecting him to questions like
comparisons between Ishmael Bernal and Brocka. Although he has worked
with them both, respects them both, he has always answered that he is
solidly in Bernie's corner.

In an interview he once said that Brocka represented the heart, and
Bernie the mind. "When we waited for an hour on a Bernie set, it was
because he was trying to solve an artistic problem. On the other
hand, when we waited for hours on a Lino set, it was because he was
out there somewhere fighting with the producers on some social
inequality problem or marketing."

We ask about his last picture three years ago Pinoy Blonde which was
a digital movie that spoofed everyone but didn't seem to get its
message across. Perhaps then it was ahead of its time, we suggest?

"I have absolutely no idea. I thought I was sharing everything I
loved about movies to people who shared the same love of movies. It
was really a lark, doing things that major studios would never dare
do with a set of the most gifted actors you could find in the
Philippines and I got a lot of hostility instead. I was attacked for
being pretentious. (???!!!) A lot of reviews claimed I was actually
simply copying Tarantino when I was spoofing Kill Bill and stuff like
that. If I wasn't so old and grizzled, it would have broken my heart.

"I hate to insult my detractors, but I'm really coming to the
conclusion that a lot of people who love movies don't really
understand movies. I don't think it's a coincidence that the
extremely scanty feedback I get raving over Pinoy Blonde are from
extremely intelligent people. Oops, I just ruffled a few feathers
again!"

We prove, "If you had all the money in the world, wha would be the
movie you would choose to produce and direct?"

"I'm sorry… you're talking to a glutton, " he quickly replies. "If I
had all the money in the world, I would produce and direct:

A) Olympia — a period epic of love and war

B) Boy D — an exploration of impersonal cellphone teenage sex with a
boy who thinks he's a vampire.

C) Agaton And Mindy — top secret

D) Epic film based on the book Ordeal in Samar — the Balanggiga
Massacre

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #546 on: Aug 13, 2008 at 06:03 PM »
Will indie films save Philippine Cinema from total extinction? He gave me again, kilometric reply.

The movement itself, I think, won't save Philippine Cinema from total extinction. I don't think Philippine Cinema is headed for extinction to begin with... it's just lying fallow and dormant and waiting for the the right whatever-it-is to give it a jump start. Remember Tessie Agana in Roberta in the 50s when everybody thought there was no hope anymore for Pinoy movies?
I think the basic problem of Pinoy movies today is that they are not basically exciting -- exciting as a product, not in the way it tells stories or the way it's shot -- you still can't remove the basic fact that people come to the movies because there are faces that tell the story. And there are no faces that make people drop whatever it is they're doing in order to go and see that face telling or being part of a story. Think Heath Ledger as the Joker -- before the movie was even shown, people had made up their minds that it was going to be a priority in their to-do list. I don't care how many awards Baron Geisler wins, people aren't going to drop their Embassy dates or Mall appointments to line up for Jay. He just doesn't have that buzz with him. Indie films don't have that excitement.  Not yet... I don't know if ever.
 
What Indie films have, is the opportunity to tell different kinds of stories away from the mind-numbing products that come from committees hired by big studios (and you know what I'm talking about). They're what I call spam projects. It's Spam... made to order; fits all requirements; easily available and totally predictable. I think that the big Producers are going to be responsible for putting the exciting movies out there and right now they're totally paralyzed and unable to do just that because they have no options, no alternatives and their brains are simply not equipped to think outside the little boxes they've sealed themselves in. But little by
little, I think they are beginning to become aware that there is some kind of excitement coming in from the original and unique stories that the Indie films are coming up with. Some business-minded prophet/producer with deep enough pockets is going to latch on to that idea... free our more exciting stars from TV bondage and start a new era of Pinoy films that will be worth dying for.

Offline sinehansakanto

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Apprentice
  • *
  • Posts: 25
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #547 on: Aug 16, 2008 at 09:28 PM »
FROM PHILIPPINE STAR - Peque Gallaga: The director as raconteur
By Bibsy M. Carballo
Saturday, August 9, 2008

Whenever the name of Peque Gallaga is mentioned, the various reactions one gets could either be of awe, intimidation, dismissal, or unmitigated worship.

"It was really a lark, doing things that major studios would never dare do with a set of the most gifted actors you could find in the
Philippines and I got a lot of hostility instead. I was attacked for being pretentious...I don't think it's a coincidence that the
extremely scanty feedback I get raving over Pinoy Blonde are from extremely intelligent people. ['Look, smart people love me!'] Oops, I just ruffled a few feathers again!"

No, not pretentious, just egocentric, narcissistic and pretentious. Unlike the humble yet profoundly talented O'Hara, this guy likes to torture the best of us by making some pedestrian movies and running his mouth about how great they are.

Offline Noel_Vera

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 12,403
  • I'm afraid of the quiet man
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 88
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #548 on: Aug 17, 2008 at 05:14 AM »
I don't know--they're ALL pretentious, egocentric, self-centered (except maybe O'Hara, and Gosiengfiao). Goes with the territory, I think. They differ in the degree they manage to hide it, when they choose to hide it, and how much they dictate the megalomania has to really dominate their persona. From what I hear (I've never met him), Gallaga is worse than some, not as bad as others. 

Can be pretty violent too, so I hear. ;D

Offline sinehansakanto

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Apprentice
  • *
  • Posts: 25
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #549 on: Aug 17, 2008 at 09:23 PM »
I don't know--they're ALL pretentious, egocentric, self-centered (except maybe O'Hara, and Gosiengfiao). Goes with the territory, I think. They differ in the degree they manage to hide it, when they choose to hide it, and how much they dictate the megalomania has to really dominate their persona. From what I hear (I've never met him), Gallaga is worse than some, not as bad as others. 

Can be pretty violent too, so I hear. ;D

I think consistently great output goes with the territory as well. Nothing excites me more than hearing a great filmmaker talk about how great his/her movies are. 

Offline Noel_Vera

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 12,403
  • I'm afraid of the quiet man
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 88
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #550 on: Aug 18, 2008 at 01:54 AM »
Or how great the next project is. Most filmmakers I know are careful not to sound too approving of past projects, but they're always on the lookout to generate buzz for the next one. Hustler, general, emperor--goes with the job description.

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #551 on: Aug 18, 2008 at 07:48 PM »
I don't know--they're ALL pretentious, egocentric, self-centered (except maybe O'Hara, and Gosiengfiao). Goes with the territory, I think. They differ in the degree they manage to hide it, when they choose to hide it, and how much they dictate the megalomania has to really dominate their persona. From what I hear (I've never met him), Gallaga is worse than some, not as bad as others. 

Can be pretty violent too, so I hear. ;D

He seems to be snobbish first time I've met him, but it all changed after the second and third time. Amiable, his comments on different subject matter will jolt you sometimes.

He's one of the most sincere filmmakers that I've met next to Lav Diaz. That egocentric description, that's their negative side, I think.


Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #552 on: Sep 16, 2008 at 06:04 PM »
Four questions that I've been raring to ask the man.......his answers!

1. Was it Sta. Cruz church in the opening scene of SCORPIO NIGHTS?

 It's either Sta. Cruz church or Binondo -- I haven't seen Scorpio in a while, so I'm not completely
sure of either, but we shot all the establishing shots for the title credits in and around the Sta. Cruz
area and Chinatown, so it's definitely one of the two churches.
 
2. Did Mother Lily gave you a freehand at all in making the movie?

 Totally. Completely. I just had a heart attack and she wasn't even sure if I was going to live or die long
enough to finish the movie. Basta, we had a really, really small budget (which is one of the reasons I
decided to do the whole thing in one location) so she didn't care what I did... she figured that whatever
I came up with -- and she had no idea of how far I would take the thing -- had some sex in it, so she
was going to get her investment back. But to be fair to Lily, in those days, she had enough respect for
her directors to leave the artistic and creative work to us... it was only when her idea to do Mano Po
was realized did she get delusions of artistic grandeur (like many of the present day female producers
both on TV and cinema) and started to get involved in the directorial process.
 
3. Why is it that Anna Marie and Orestes are unnamed in the film?

 Because it wasn't the story of two specific people. Because they were a metaphor. Because they were units
in microcosmic study of a cultural sink phenomenon. I think that's proof that from the very beginning we
had higher motives for Scorpio other than purely gratuitous ones.
 
4. Now that ORO PLATA MATA had been released on dvd, too bad it didn't include your commentary, its selling like hotcakes now in the market, how do you feel about it?

I'm totally depressed by it. I knew they were working on this for a long time and I let it be known that I would be
interested in contributing to a lot of the process without charging a cent. To allow the creator of the work to be able
to, in a sense, continue in that process. I was totally ignored. I have my own version which I worked on -- the video
quality is not as good as the ABS CBN job because of its U-Matic source, but my audio version is superior to theirs.
That's ABS CBN for you... no respect for the artists whose works they get fat on. 
« Last Edit: Sep 16, 2008 at 06:10 PM by keating »

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #553 on: Oct 07, 2008 at 11:05 AM »
On Our Shelves: Oro, Plata, Mata
by Philbert Ortiz Dy

Oro, Plata, Mata
Directed by Peque Gallaga
Written by Jose Javier Reyes
Starring Manny Ojeda, Liza Lorena, Sandy Andolong, Cherie Gil, Joel Torre, Ronnie Lazaro, Fides Cuyugan-Asension, Maya Valdez, Lorli Villanueva
Originally released 1982 by the Experimental Cinema of the Philippines
Released on DVD by Star Home Video






Talking about Oro, Plata, Mata (Gold, Silver, Death) isn’t the easiest thing to do. Its scope is so vast, so ridiculously epic that one article probably isn’t enough to cover all the things that it does. Where does one begin?

The film is notorious for several reasons: the length (three hours and thirteen minutes from an original cut reportedly six hours long), the explicit sex and the extreme violence. But none of these elements really stand to describe what the experience of watching the film is like. Yes, it’s long, but there’s so much going on that you might not feel it. Yes, there’s sex and violence, borrowing techniques from seventies’ exploitation films, but it’s not an exploitation film itself. It’s a struggle to accurately describe the experience of watching Oro, Plata, Mata, other than to say that it’s pretty unique.





Let’s talk about what it’s about. The film begins with a quote from Nick Joaquin that talks about how life was irrevocably changed after the Japanese invasion, so much so that people came to refer to the all the years prior to the invasion as “peacetime,” and all years afterwards as just something that isn’t peacetime. We then find ourselves in the middle of a lavish birthday party for Maggie, eldest daughter of the affluent Ojeda clan. In one corner of this revelry, Don Claudio, the patriarch of the family, discusses the oncoming Japanese threat with a group of men who downplay it completely. In another corner, Trining, the younger daughter, gives her first kiss to her boyfriend, the timid and childish Miguel. Miguel’s mother, Inday Lorenzo, is the best friend of Trining’s mother, Nena. The celebration is cut short when news arrives of a ship sunk by a mine, killing those on board.





We move on ahead to the Ojeda Hacienda in the province, where the family is hiding out. Nena has invited some of her friends to stay with them and wait out the war. Among them, her best friend Inday and her son, Miguel, the gossipy jewelry obsessed Viring Ravillo, and the American educated progressive Jo Russell. The ladies spend their time playing mahjong and gossiping about everything. Meanwhile, Maggie fears that her soldier boyfriend has lost his life in Corregidor. Trining is giving Miguel trouble about not being manly enough. Don Claudio is offering all the help he can to the guerillas. But even this peace can’t last that long, and the Japanese soon arrive, prompting the families to move yet again.





This time, they move to the Lorenzos’ house in the mountains. The place is far from luxurious, but they still cling to their comforts. Soon, however, the war reaches them again when the guerillas bring their wounded to the house for treatment. They leave behind a soldier, Hermes, whose tongue had to be stitched up and left him unable to speak. Trining, grown weary of the life she’s clung to, finds her sexual awakening with Hermes. Meanwhile, the family’s head servant Melchor becomes fed up with doing all the work for nothing and steals one of Viring’s rings. He confesses to it and leaves the family, only to come back with a group of bandits. The bandits leave the families in ruins, and Trining goes with them. After some effort, Miguel gets the ladies back into their routine, gaining Maggie’s admiration in the process. He and Hermes then venture into bandit territory to get back Trining, and the two of them kill everyone there.





We end with another party. The war has ended. The Americans have come back bearing gifts of Spam and corned beef. Maggie and Miguel are getting married. Trining has turned into a hardened, spiteful woman who thinks the families deserved all the hardship they got. And while this last scene is a celebration that reflects the first one we saw, there’s no denying that everything has changed.

The script, by Jose Javier Reyes, is so thematically dense that a single interpretation is probably insufficient to discuss what the movie is really about. One could say, at the very least, that it’s about life during wartime, the inescapability of conflict, and how people cling to shred of their civility in order to make sense of all the brutality. It’s about how invaders aren’t the only ones guilty of atrocities towards our own people. It’s about masters and servants, slaves and slavers. It’s about the rich, the hacienderos, and their way of life. It’s about women without husbands and children without fathers. It’s about people’s propensity for violence. It’s about irrevocable change, how one can never really go back to happier times, once you’ve been touched by war. It’s about one generation ignoring the wisdom of the elderly. It’s about how time keeps on moving; even when life as you know it ends. It’s about inevitable decay: gold, silver, death. It’s about the country, and how we’ve come to this point.





Personally, what struck me the most was how we only ever saw one Japanese soldier throughout the film, and he was wounded and unable to do any harm. It’s a film about the war, but the Japanese forces never stand out as villains of the piece. All of the violence done in the film was perpetrated by Filipinos, mostly against other Filipinos. And by the end of the film, it seemed that the violence had permeated the society, and though the guns were put away, the people were still carrying them in their hearts. Because nobody wins in a war.





The production is incredibly lavish. It’s worth noting that prior to becoming a director, Peque Gallaga was a production designer for the likes of Brocka, Bernal and Romero. His aesthetic vision certainly shows, producing frames filled with wonderful little details and some truly breathtaking shots. Gallaga’s not the best storyteller out there; chunks of this film feel kind of disjointed, but the sheer force of this film is undeniable. What Gallaga does is he imparts the film a sense of grandeur. The film is epic, and while the scenes don’t flow as smoothly as they could, they are big enough and brash enough to carry you with them anyway. The one shot that stands out, of course, is the exodus of the families, with carabaos marching in front of a burning plain. It’s a truly captivating sight, and easily one of the best scenes ever committed to film. Gallaga’s grand and ambitious production design is matched easily by the cinematography of the great Rody Lacap, who lensed Batch ‘81 and many other great films.





The film owes much to its cast as well. Sandy Andolong, Joel Torre, Ronnie Lazaro, and Cherie Gil all went on to become some of the most respected thespians in our industry, and no amount of praise can do justice to their talent. This was Joel Torre’s first starring role, and it’s fascinating to see him so young. Even back then he was bigger than cinema could ever handle. I could spend weeks talking about how great Cherie Gil is. She should just be in every film made from now on. But really, the standout is Ronnie Lazaro, who plays Hermes. His character is unable to speak for most of the film, but Lazaro rises way above that limitation, saying more with a stare or a slight movement of his lip than most actors of today can say with a lengthy monologue. Without speech, Lazaro makes Hermes a creature of pure emotion. It’s a dynamite performance, and it ought to be required viewing for anyone who wants to become an actor.






There’s really so much more to say, but the article’s already running long. I haven’t even gotten a chance to talk about the film’s excellent score. Suffice it to say that Oro, Plata, Mata has much to offer you. It’s the kind of film that gives you more and more to chew on the more you watch it. It’s an almost frighteningly rich film experience, one that shouldn’t be missed by any Filipino film devotee. Films this ambitious just aren’t being made here anymore, and whether you end up becoming a fan of the film or not, you can at least appreciate it for that.
« Last Edit: Oct 07, 2008 at 06:33 PM by keating »

Offline thegoodbyeguy

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • DVD Guru
  • ****
  • Posts: 1,425
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #554 on: Oct 24, 2008 at 09:14 AM »


         Peque Gallaga will scream "The Horror! The Horror!" in this Sunday's issue of SIM about horror movies. A fun cover in this spook-month. Looks forward to read the whole package.


Offline thegoodbyeguy

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • DVD Guru
  • ****
  • Posts: 1,425
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #555 on: Oct 26, 2008 at 10:50 AM »
      GROWING UP WITH THE FORCES
     FROM BEYOND


       
      By Carla Gomez
      Philippine Daily Inquirer
      26 October 2008


     


BACOLOD CITY―The yaya (nursemaid) did it.

When they were kids, Peque Gallaga and his four siblings had a nanny named Mayang who came from Capiz, a province in Western Visayas that to this day has been associated with aswangs (local equivalent of vampires) despite strong objections from Capiceños.

Mayang was like a mother to the Gallaga children, but to get them to behave she used the forces from beyond. The ghoulish stories she narrated apparently followed the director right up to his initial foray into the movies.

Gallaga megged and wrote some of the scariest and most memorable Filipino horror films, among them “Sa Piling ng mga Aswang,” “Halik ng Bampira,” “Tiyanak,” “Hiwaga sa Balete Drive,” “Aswang,” and the “Shake, Rattle and Roll” movies.

He recalls: “We lived on Carolina Street in Manila and, to get us to eat or hurry up, Mayang would concoct scary stories.”

Adds Gallaga: “My sister had these big Spanish dolls and Mayang would dress them up and put them up by the window. Then she’d tell us that if we did not finish our plate, the dolls would get us.”

Sometimes they would hear the rumbling of rocks only to discover that their yaya had been throwing stones down the playground slide to scare them, says Gallaga.

But not all the strange things they saw when they were growing up could be explained away, he says. “Once we were all in the dining room when all of sudden, we heard a rumbling from the garage. Mayang said, ‘Ara na, gapakadto na (it’s there, it’s coming)!’

“Then the door suddenly opened, the lights went off and a huge figure like that of a Japanese soldier in a trench coat barged in. Our houseboy and I hid under the table, while Mayang grabbed my sister and they ran to the bathroom.

“Our dog, a very friendly boxer, was growling and biting the strange man’s leg but he continued to walk around the room as if nothing was bothering him. It was if Mayang had summoned the strange apparition into our home,” Gallaga says.

Once, he recounts, his sister Chita was giving Mayang trouble so the nanny brought her to a small bodega outside their house that was filled with junk. Except that when Chita got there, she did not see junk; what she saw was a room filled with meat dripping blood.

It might have been childish imagination, but there was also a time when Mayang brought him into a completely dark room inside their house, Gallaga recalls. Suddenly, he saw an exquisite Japanese doll glowing and floating in the air. “There was no doll like that in the house so I don’t know where Mayang could have gotten it,” he adds.

“That experience affected me all my life so now, I can never put my hand inside a dark closet,” he says.

There were nights too when Mayang would carry a knife and a candle and wake us up to wash our feet, recalls Gallaga. “She was totally crazy. At one point she was dancing on the roof in high heels like Maria Clara,” he says.

In fact, adds Gallaga, “I know what it’s like to be inside a mental hospital. My mother had to leave Mayang there for a year because she went completely bananas.” The family later took Mayang back when she got well and she became part of their life, says the director. When one of his brothers started raising his own family, he also asked Mayang to take care of them, he says.

Gallaga’s mother Conchita Luzuriaga grew up on a farm in Negros herself, so ghost stories were nothing new to her; she believed half of Mayang’s stories and had her own stories to tell.

But the ghost stories were kept secret from Gallaga’s father, Ricardo, who was in the trucking and shipping business. “My father was a very macho guy who won’t believe those stories, says the director.

“Filipinos have a far richer and scarier culture than what the Americans are selling us through Halloween,” says Gallaga. “We grow up with scary stories in our homes, and they are part of our culture. That’s why Pinoys love horror movies; they’re so real to us.”

He adds: “Scratch a Filipino Catholic and you will find an animist who still believes in diwatas (fairies) underneath. Altars are still populated with magic charms―amulets and dried palm stalks to keep the aswang away.”

But making a good horror film takes more than just being immersed in the genre, says Gallaga. Filmmakers, he points out, “should go beyond the shock factor, beyond the blood and the gore.”

Horror films should not end in prosthetics; they have to work on the mind, he says.

Scary movies are not just about a fearsome monster; they have to delve into the psychology behind it, the director explains. “You are not only afraid of the vampire or the multo; you are afraid of a particular thing like loneliness in the city,” he illustrates.

Gallaga says he was in college when he saw the movie “It’s Alive,” about a baby who becomes a monster because of toxic waste.

“When I became a director I wanted to do a similar movie about a baby that kills until I realized that that’s what a tiyanak is,” he says.

A tiyanak is a monster that uses pity as its protection, he explains. “Can you kill a baby?” Gallaga asks. And that’s exactly the dilemma that Lotlot de Leon faces in the 1988 movie “Tiyanak,” which he directed.

“She knows the tiyanak is a monster that’s going to eat her, but when she gets a stone to bash the baby in, she can’t because of compassion and pity,” he says. “I think that is what makes a horror story rich,” he adds.

Our own rich culture should convince us to stick to our own stories instead of always copying Hollywood, Gallaga the director muses. “We can’t be any good in a genre like science fiction because the state of science in our country is so under par. We can’t create believable stories where our heroes are involved in highly scientific adventures like space exploration or dealing with aliens―so we should stick to horror because in this regard, we can hold our own with the rest of the world.”

He adds: “My last horror film, ‘Sa Piling ng Mga Aswang’ was about another species coexisting with us at a different level. except that we drive them away from the forest and disturb the balance of nature.

“I think that’s what makes my horror movies work. No matter how many people there are in Manila, they all have their roots in the province,” he says.

The popularity of horror films today, even in the west, Gallaga attributes to the phenomenon of people not being in control of their lives. “There’s that feeling that there is something out there that is stronger and more powerful than us and which is getting in the way and destroying our plans,” he says.

Gallaga says he would love to direct another horror film but producers either think he’s semi-retired or is too old school. “Producers are asking younger people to come out with younger stories so I’m not getting too many offers,” he says.

“But producers should realize that I think out of the box. Mother Lily (Monteverde) never knew how ‘Scorpio Nights’ would turn out,” he says. “I have been in show business so long that I want to tell stories that are worth telling.”

Gallaga says he has one horror movie that he has been trying to sell for a long time and which Mother Lily actually likes. “It’s just that it’s difficult because the bida (lead star) needs to be in the age range of Gretchen Barretto or Kris Aquino but these stars are too busy to make a movie.” Either of the two would have been perfect for the movie because moviegoers these days go for films with younger actors, he adds.

Given the chance, he’d like to shoot the entire movie in Silay City in Negros Occidental because of its many old ancestral homes.

The movie, he adds, is not just about possession and ghosts; it has to do with the confessional and the sacrament of forgiveness. “The movie will play on the mind; it will be about something that happened in the past that has to be fixed in the present,” he says.

Gallaga says if he had the resources, he’d like to remake the movie, “Tiyanak.” “In my original ‘Tiyanak,’ we used hand puppets. With all the digital wizardry now, it would be fantastic, a lot more sophisticated,” he says.

Gallaga says he would also like to do another version of his 1982 movie “Oro Plata Mata,” that he directed after winning a scriptwriting contest sponsored by the Experimental Cinema of the Philippines. The highly acclaimed movie received an award from the International Film Festival of Flanders-Ghent, Belgium in 1983, a Special Jury Award from the Manila International Film Festival, and the 2004 Gawad CCP Para sa Sining.

“I had to win a contest to raise the money for ‘Oro Plata Mata;’ now nobody wants to give me the P50 million I need to make ‘Olympia,’” he rues. “It would be an epic love story of course. The director now is 30 years older and a lot gentler, mellower and less angry,” he says. Gallaga is currently the artist in residence at the University of Saint La Salle in Bacolod City.

A good horror movie, says this award-winning director, satisfies the part of us that believes in Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” when he said, “There are more things in Heaven and earth… Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”


THE HORROR, THE HORROR! His Top 3 Favorite Horror Films:

1. THE EYE (2002)
2. COUNT YORGA (1970)
3. THE SIXTH SENSE (1999)




 
« Last Edit: Oct 26, 2008 at 11:46 AM by thegoodbyeguy »

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #556 on: Oct 30, 2008 at 06:48 PM »
He was in Manila for four days last week and not keen on doing any teleserye that's flooding on the small screen right now.

CEBU Book 3 will just be a big dream or no hope at all.


Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #557 on: Jan 01, 2009 at 03:50 PM »


My favorite still pic from VIRGIN FOREST. Shooting and holding the umbrella was the late master cinematographer Conrado Baltazar. Photo courtesy of Mr. Peque Gallaga. The Macabebes going down to Atimonan River. The fog is real.
« Last Edit: Jan 02, 2009 at 07:14 PM by keating »

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #558 on: Jan 04, 2009 at 01:25 PM »
AGATON & MINDY's principal photography starts mid-January as part of APT and Director's Guild film series Sine Direk.

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #559 on: Sep 18, 2009 at 10:21 AM »
Peque Gallaga’s Cinema: Signature in gold


By Lito Zulueta
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 20:39:00 09/16/2009




PEQUE Gallaga will receive The Natatanging Gawad for Lifetime Achievement for Filmmaking from the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino during the 32nd Gawad Urian on September 19 at the Cultural Center of the Philippines.

National Artist Bienvenido Lumbera, founding member of the Manunuri, the society of respected film critics, says Gallaga is “the epitome of the compleat Filipino cinema artist,” and that it is only fitting that Gallaga be honored by all those who love Filipino cinema “before the sun completely sets on the film industry.”

The waxing and waning of the fortunes of mainstream cinema seems reflected in the person of Gallaga, a serious filmmaker with a track record of box-office hits and successful remaking of commercial genres, particularly of horror and fantasy movies.

As mainstream commercial cinema struggles, independent and out-of-studio films have shown vibrancy and resilience, even catapulting Filipino movie to new global renown. Part of these stirrings of hope can be gleaned from the emergent regional cinema, whose mentorship and encouragement owes to Gallaga’s selfless tutelage.

Gallaga has won several Urian awards: Best Director for “Oro Plata Mata” in 1982; Best Production Design for “Ganito Kami Noon, Paano Kayo Ngayon?” (together with Laida Lim Perez) in 1976, and for “Manila By Night: City After Dark” in 1980.

Gallaga entered into prominence with “Ganito Kami Noon...” directed by Eddie Romero. This important historical movie was shown on the same year as Brocka’s “Insiang,” Ishmael Bernal’s “Nunal sa Tubig,” Lupita Concio’s “Minsa’y Isang Gamu-Gamo,” Gerry de Leon’s “Banawe,” Mike de Leon’s “Itim,” Mario O’ Hara’s “Tatlong Taong Walang Diyos,” and Gil Portes’ debut movie, “Tiket Mama, Tiket Ale, Sa Linggo ang Bola” – making 1976 the peak of the second golden age of Philippine cinema.

Gallaga’s early career illustrates the truism that great filmmakers do not necessarily influence each other; more practically, they work with each other, often in an unwitting sort of apprenticeship. Brocka had worked with Romero as scriptwriter; Mike de Leon had worked with Brocka and later, Romero, as cinematographer.

Gallaga, who finished Commerce and Liberal Arts at De la Salle University but had enrolled briefly in the architecture school of the University of Santo Tomas, had worked with Romero and Bernal (notably in “Manila By Night”) as production designer. Also an actor, Gallaga played a part in “Tatlong Taong Walang Diyos,” and Brocka’s “Gumising Ka, Maruja” (1978).

Gallaga would become a full-fledged filmmaker with his second directorial effort, “Oro Plata Mata” (1982), and later, “Scorpio Nights” (1985), arguably his two best movies. In both movies, Gallaga shows directorial breadth of vision and art director’s capaciousness, and it is hard to tell which is which. Since he’s also the writer of “Oro,” Gallaga may have demolished the classic auteur theory or embodied it in its fullest sense: he is author and creator in one.

He would exhibit the same bravura in “Virgin Forest” (1985), “Unfaithful Wife” (1986), and in his recasting of the horror genre, the very successful “Shake, Rattle and Roll” series.

His “Once Upon a Time” (1988) is another brilliant recasting, this one of Filipino folklore, with Dolphy playing the mythical role of the Filipino netherworld’s tikbalang. And his “Gangland” (1998) may have set off the gritty urban street drama of today, as manifested in such provocative movies as Brillante Mendoza’s “Tirador” and Jim Libiran’s “Tribu.”

Gallaga continues to make movies while based in his hometown of Bacolod, where he is artist-in-residence, and where he teaches theater and film at the University of St. La Salle. He has mentored future filmmakers and media artists, including Jay Abella, Manny Montelibano, Vicente Groyon and Richard Somes. A multi-variegated artist of intrepid vision and incredible stamina, Gallaga has become one of our few elder statesmen of the cinema arts.

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #560 on: Sep 20, 2009 at 11:09 AM »
My close encounters with Direk Peque By Butch Francisco
 
STAR BYTES (The Philippine Star) September 15, 2009 12:00 AM

Peque Gallaga excels in everything he does — as director, screenwriter, production designer and even in pushing regional theater

Peque. The name comes from the Spanish word pequeno, meaning little or small. Since I learned of his existence, mainly through his landmark of a film Oro, Plata, Mata, there was nothing little or small about Peque Gallaga. Certainly not his physical size. He had always been hefty — from the time I saw him accept the Best Director and Picture trophies for Oro, Plata, Mata during the sixth Gawad Urian. (I was still years away from becoming a Manunuri.)

That time he was wearing a formal dark suit, but was sporting what seemed like a mohawk haircut in front, but was long at the back. I recall movie journalist Mario Bautista write in one of his columns that “years from now, when he sees those pictures of him, Peque would probably cringe at the sight of his hairstyle.” Even then, my bet was Peque wouldn’t. I never had the chance to ask.

I can count with my fingers the number of times we’ve met. Whatever I know of him came mostly from Joel Torre, his prized discovery, and various materials written about him in the past. It was Joel who first told me that Peque was the Gallagas’ term of endearment for him when he was little. Born Maurice Lazarriaga Gallaga on Aug. 25, 1943, he spent his elementary and high school years at De La Salle in Manila, but moved to the school’s Bacolod branch when he was in college (he finished commerce and liberal arts).

At La Salle Bacolod, he taught theater and film. When he moved back to Manila, however, he got involved in television musicals and eventually co-directed the movie Binhi with Butch Perez.

Peque actually belongs to the first batch of Gawad Urian winners in 1976 when he and Laida Lim-Perez won Best Production Design for Eddie Romero’s Ganito Kami Noon, Paano Kayo Ngayon?. He won the same award for Ishmael Bernal’s City after Dark in 1980.

In 1982, he finally came up with Oro, Plata, Mata for the Experimental Cinema of the Philippines and to this day is what I consider the best Filipino movie of all time. I’ve been in awe of Peque ever since.

I finally met him in person in the mid-’80s when I was assigned media director of the Film Academy Classification Board (FACB), which industry members hoped would be an alternative to the board of censors. Nestor Torre was the first chairman of the FACB, but when he quit, the late Louie Beltran took over. Now, Louie was a very busy man and hardly had the time to attend the screenings. In his absence, I would be tapped to act as chairman. Although it was very nominal in nature, I still felt uncomfortable because I was very raw — practically just out of college.

Peque attended only a single screening in the two years of the board’s existence and on the day he showed up Eddie Romero (then FAP deputy director general) told him to “just trust me.” Peque held his flashlight (the members were all provided with one each in case they wanted to take down notes) and playfully pointed it at me (no, I wasn’t blinded by its illumination because the house lights were still on). Sizing me up, he told me: “Okay, I trust you.”

The next time we met was at the wake for the late entertainment columnist Bob Castillo. I had just reviewed his movie, Isang Araw Walang Diyos and pointed out how I was so offended by its blood and gore. I swear it felt like his camera lens was mopping up a pool of blood. That was how it registered on screen. I was ready to be assaulted by him that evening and had psychologically prepared myself to have my body brought down to the morgue downstairs after he was done with me. To my relief, he never mentioned anything about it when I said hello to him and he remained a southern gent all throughout the evening. (I now suspect he never read my review.)

In the mid-’90s, we were both asked to judge a scriptwriting contest by ABS-CBN and we met up for the deliberations. As always, he was pleasant and I savored that moment because I’ve always looked up to him as an artist.

Some years back, he visited the Startalk set for some reason I didn’t bother to ask. I just so wanted to ask him where I could get a copy of Oro, Plata, Mata, but he said that even he didn’t have a copy then. I admit I have such fixation on this film that I once risked getting late to work because when it was shown on Channel 23 one Saturday, it finished at way past 2 p.m. and Startalk airs at 2:30. (Aside from Oro, I also adore his Scorpio Nights, Virgin Forest, Unfaithful Wife and the Manananggal episode of the original Shake, Rattle & Roll.)

In 2002, I spent Holy Week in Bacolod and when I went to the grocery to get provisions, I bumped into him and he said that he was already based there practically. I was touched no end when he asked me if I had anyone taking care of me there — and that if I was going to be okay. I thought that was so kind of him and I am the type never to forget kindness.

My admiration for him grew even further when — during a meeting of the Manunuri ng Pilipino a few months ago — we sat down to talk about Peque’s achievements and why he deserves to be given this year’s Natatanging Gawad Urian during our awards night this Saturday, Sept. 19, at the CCP Little Theater.

Yes, Peque Gallaga excels in everything he does — as director, screenwriter, production designer and even in pushing regional theater. It’s truly fitting that this year’s Urian has a regional touch to it because a lot of entries come in different dialects. Of course, Ilonggo is ably represented by Yanggaw, one of the nominated films.

Peque. Even the name fascinates me. Some people may have made fun of it — probably calling him peke in jest. They’re wrong. His talent for the arts is real and genuine.
« Last Edit: Sep 20, 2009 at 11:15 AM by keating »

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #561 on: Apr 03, 2010 at 07:25 PM »
The man bares his angst on this digital age on the Jan/Feb issue of the local edition of Playboy magazine. Excerpts will be posted soon...

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #562 on: May 04, 2010 at 11:11 AM »
"I consider myself a very intelligent director. But I refuse to do a movie and say, this is for the importance of socialized medicine in the life of the Filipino. I do not buy that. The idea that 99% of the movies reiterate, that the poor are downtrodden and the rich are bastards, I will agree. But then I will do an ORO PLATA MATA to show that the rich are human also. And then the socialists will get very angry!"

-Peque Gallaga

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #563 on: May 04, 2010 at 11:31 AM »
Conversations with Mother Lily on VIRGIN FOREST after watching the final product:



Mother Lily: You lied to me, ha?! This is period!

(Direk Peque protested.)
Peque Gallaga: Mother, you knew it was a period film. The story took place during the time of General Aguinaldo.

Mother Lily: Yes, you said so. But I did not know that it would be that period!

The irony of it was that the only girl in the film was not even a virgin anymore.  ;D



« Last Edit: May 04, 2010 at 11:40 AM by keating »

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: Uro dela Cruz on Peque Gallaga
« Reply #564 on: Jun 10, 2010 at 07:18 AM »
PQ
PEQUE GALLAGA


By Uro Q. Dela Cruz

I first heard the name Gallaga after watching a scene where this mestizo character that I have not seen before in all my years watching Pilipino movies was gunned down in Mario O’hara’s Tatlong Taong Walang Diyos. I thought, he is probably from the same theatre community where actors like Burgoses, Rochas, came from. I did not see him again in other films after that. I learned that he was doing production design for Ishmael Bernal for whom I was developing several scripts. But we never met, until he came to the office where I was working to offer me a chance to be an alternate to one of the actors in Oro Plata Mata, his winning ECP entry, for which he was casting at the time. My brother Abbo had been cast a week ago and I wondered why he was asking me –furthermore, I had not appeared in any movie before and I had no intention to be an actor. He convinced me to have a costume fitting at his house. Production designer Don Escudero chose a soldier’s uniform for me and put a tag on it with my name. I started to have stage fright. The actor who was originally chosen to play the role was having difficulty deciding whether to accept the role until the last moment, exactly on the night before everybody involved in the movie was to fly to Bacolod.
As they flew to the jungles of Bacolod, I was left in Manila with nothing but an hecho derecho measurement, courtesy of Don Escudero.
I tried to forget about the whole incident.
And then, in December 1982, the movie was premiered at the Film Center.

From the moment the first bar of Oro Plata Mata’s theme music was heard at the opening sequence until it faded at the end of act one, almost everybody watching its gala premiere 21 years ago was convinced that they were a part of a historic event. That first act alone hinted that it was the end of Philippine cinema as we knew it. It was almost perfect in its blend of cinematic elements –the balance of cinematography, music and sound --brave dramatization of scenes, fresh delineation of characters, irreverent handling of serious issues, and unblinking presentation of choreographed violence never before seen in Pilipino movies. A few critics and film makers who were seated next to me were turned off by the violence and thought that they were the weakest points of the movie. They seemed to have forgotten that they were watching a movie about war. Younger viewers liked it very much and even hinted that maybe, a new age, a renaissance of local cinema was at hand.
Unfortunately, the film spearheaded no such movement. But it started building a body of work from one who will prove to be the most innovative, idiosyncratic, and intelligent Filipino filmmakers. After just one film, he earned the honor to use the tagline “A Peque Gallaga Film”.

I met him again because somehow, he got a copy of one of the scripts I was developing and he offered to option it as his next project. But I promised it earlier to another director. He seemed disappointed.
I saw him next a year later, while Abbo de la Cruz was shooting Misteryo sa Tuwa (another ECP winner) in Mount Banahaw. I was helping out as crowd director and Peque was playing the part of a dead plane crash victim. During lulls in the shooting, we talked and began to know each other. He loved to play games and rode a bicycle around the narrow streets of Lucban. At first, it was hard to reconcile the idea that this person just made one of the greatest films in recent years, and he was playing practical jokes on the set.

Three months after Misteryo wrapped, I found myself working on the script of one third of the first Shake Rattle and Roll series. Meanwhile, Peque was pitching a project to Lily Monteverde, and there was still no word about it. At that time, all the major movie directors were doing sex oriented movies for special screenings at the Film Center. As expected, our proposed project was of the same mold.
Shake Rattle and Roll which was available in the meantime turned out to be relatively an easy shoot. We finished it in just a week. Being a newcomer and an “outsider” to Peque’s closely knit staff (all Oro Plata Mata veterans), I did not have the chance to learn how he really worked. I knew that I was only invited to be with them on location so that I can be consulted on the script when needed.

After the release of Shake Rattle and Roll, Peque called to announce that Regal Films was interested in our turn-of-the-century project.
It was during the making of Virgin Forest, that I learned about the serious side of Peque Gallaga. When he talked about the script, he was all business. Early at that stage, he would talk about how the scoring should be, what filters to use on the lenses –he called the cinematographer to ask his opinion, took a note of that, scheduled the test shoot of Sarsi Emmanuel, arranges for the acting workshop of Pen Medina, new comer Abel Jurado and the stuntmen who would play the Macabebe soldiers. He asked me to prepare scenes to be worked out with the actors during the workshop. (At that time, making actors undergo acting workshops is unheard of. Peque believed that actors must approach a project prepared. In other productions, directors were expected to bully unprepared actors to bring out their best! ) Peque went over period photographs with Don Escudero to finalize production and costume design. These were compared with photographs from the location hunting. And amidst all these, he was preparing for a meeting with Mother Lily in the evening. It was common belief that Oro Plata Mata turned out to be a good movie because ECP gave Peque everything he needed. People looking in thought Oro Plata Mata was good only because it was expensive. With this next project, he would be dealing with Mother Lily, a real producer. “Virgin Forest” was to be Peque’s first “pelikulang Tagalog”. The producer’s requirement was basic: it had to star Sarsi Emmanuel and Miguel Rodriguez. And even if it was about the capture of Emilio Aguinaldo, its title must be “Virgin Forest”.
Mother Lily finally gave the go signal.
In the next few days, the staff and crew invaded Atimonan beach. Two villages had to be built, one at the edge of a forest, and another near a creek. Several camp sites to be identified within the forest itself. A launch would have to be rigged to look like the ones plying the Tayabas shoreline at the turn of the century.
Peque ran a tight ship. With his staff, he made sure that a judicious schedule is formulated. Everything else is bound to that. It was almost like religion. Every department made sure that no delay occurred in the delivery of every requirement. The training they learned from Oro was applied here once again.
Two days before actual shoot, we sat in a hut in Atimonan beach and he made me read each line of dialogue from the script. He wanted to make sure that he understood them the way I did. And in the next few days, I would see the Peque Gallaga ritual that set him apart from the other directors I have worked with before.
Under the huge trees or at the edge of a brook in Quezon Memorial Park, a protected forest, Peque would sit in his director!s chair and meticulously break down the scene to be shot that day. In his tiny hand writing, he would make a shot list, each entry was preceded with a symbol signifying camera angle and general orientation. Lines of dialogue were cut into fragments that fit into his planned edited version of the scene. And he was set to go.
The actors arrived in the set prepared. Scenes were rehearsed. And then, the fun began. He was most active right before the cameras rolled --making final checks on the costumes, looking out for colors that don’t seem to belong, creatively disarranging things that seemed too ordered, adding an item that looked interesting and intriguing, giving his actors suggestions, reminding them of a moment discovered during the workshop. It all went well that first day. And at the end of the day, I caught him humming an Ilonggo ditty. On other days, it would be a Tom Waits song.
Also, after that first day, I banished my initial image of Peque Gallaga the mad genius whom I initially imagined to be a painter frenetically throwing gobs of paint on a canvas until something that pleases him came out. Peque distrusted artistic accidents. But he welcomed surprises especially from actors who, inspired by the moment, managed to bring out something beyond what was asked of them as in the massacre scene at Aguinaldos’s camp --a marching band drummer reacted by throwing his drum, after an American soldier fired a gun at him.
During the whole shooting of Virgin Forest, he would always be humming a song on the way back to the base camp.
After watching the finished film for the first time, Peque told me that Mother Lily could not believe that that was the movie she produced.

Aside from Virgin Forest and 1/3 of Shake Rattle and Roll, I wrote 3 more movies for Peque Gallaga -- Scorpio Nights, Unfaithful Wife and Once Upon a Time.
He kept his dedicated staff and crew that whole time. And making movies with that community of what we fondly called “the cultural sakadas” was almost not work. I suspected that what kept it going was actually beyond creative passion, it was like a curse which you had to feed and live with.

After about three years of movie making, the tagline “A Peque Gallaga Film could easily be (as it has always been) mistaken to mean movies with torrid love scenes, violence, rough language and gruesome creatures. But only people who set out looking for them made these mistakes. For his real followers, the tagline meant an experience not easily found in other films.
Peque treated all his films with equal care and attention. He made sure that the audience was not cheated and insulted. A horror movie went through the same preparations as did his action dramas. The performances were kept authentic and honest. Care was equally given to technical requirements and art direction. The phrase “pwede na ‘yan” was banned in Peque’s movie set.

Television lured me away from the movies.
I met Peque after more than 10 years since writing Once Upon a Time. Over the years, a few of Peque’s films had been invited to be shown at international film festivals, from San Francisco, Tokyo, Shanghai, France and Canada. In 1995 during a special retrospective of Scorpio Nights in Toronto, Canada, the late David Overbey who was a festival programmer challenged Peque Gallaga to do a Scorpio Nights for the 90’s. I found myself writing Diliryo and working with Gallaga again.

Like a movie gunfighter, he carved a notch on the arm rest of the director’s chair after he finished a movie. Now, it is easy to look at it as a private reminder of personal achievement. But if making film is a curse bestowed on him at the start of his career, the notches can also be seen as a prisoner’s reminder of his time inside a jail he does not wish to get out of.

A lot of people (all cursed) who worked with Peque Gallaga either as Assistant Director, Production Designer, and Scriptwriter have become film directors themselves. They may have learned a thing or two from Peque, the way he admitted learning from Ishmael Bernal (“not how to direct, but how to be a director”), but that is inevitable because Peque is a good teacher. He does not keep what he knows to himself, and always acknowledges lessons he has learned from you and things he has discovered with you during the process of making a film. He always calls to ask your consent whenever he feels that something you have talked about a long time ago could be used in a project he is working on. Decency like this is rare in an industry famous for all sorts of aberration.

I only write scripts for three directors, each of them my personal choice. Peque Gallaga is on top of that list. Even if I had been directing my own movies, for Peque Gallaga, I will always be honored to be his scriptwriter.

It is unfortunate and sad that the Filipino film industry cannot sustain the continuing creative energy of filmmakers like Peque Gallaga who, I believe, still has a number of films waiting to be broken down into a list of camera set-ups and entered by hand into his clipboard. And I am sure there is still enough space for several notches on the armrest of his director’s chair.


Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: THE PEQUE GALLAGA THREAD
« Reply #565 on: Feb 20, 2012 at 06:34 PM »
A musical tribute to 16 martyrs

By Linda B. Bolido
Philippine Daily Inquirer
11:31 pm | Sunday, February 19th, 2012

It may seem like a strange subject for a musical—the massacre of 16 La Salle brothers and several Filipinos as World War II winded down.
But for award-winning director Peque Gallaga, a true-green La Sallian, having been with the school from elementary to college, the event deserved to be celebrated.
In a press conference announcing the restaging of the all-La Salle production of “A Fire in the Soul: A Cantata,” Gallaga, who is directing the musical, said, “They (La Sallian martyrs) were the first foreigners who proved Filipinos were worth dying for.”
For the De la Salle educational system, theirs was a story of service to humanity worth remembering eternally and having songs sung in homage.
Based in Singapore at the outbreak of the war, the 16 La Sallian brothers came to the Philippines when the United Kingdom expelled German nationals from its territories. The British were at war with the Germans in Europe.

Innocent victims
As the tide turned against the Japanese invaders and the Americans made their unrelenting drive toward Manila, the enemies vented their frustration on hapless, unarmed citizens.
The brothers and some families that had sought refuge in the chapel of the De la Salle school on Taft Avenue were advised to flee.
But the Japanese were not at war with the Germans, they were allies, in fact, so the brothers thought they would be safe, Gallaga said.
What happened on Feb. 12, 1945, was too gruesome even at a time when people had gotten used to the sight of blood and gore. The massacre left only one survivor.
Gallaga said, aside from showing a love for their host country, the brothers’ death  also showed that investing in Filipinos meant not only teaching them literacy and numeracy. He said the message of the show was “on the level of what inspired people to join the ‘yellow army’ (pro-Cory Aquino groups that toppled a dictator)—high ideals, high principles …”
Vicente Garcia Groyon, who wrote the libretto (lyrics), said the brothers’ story had to be remembered not just by the La Salle community. Von de Guzman, composer, said, because of its subject, the cantata was probably more of a requiem, a remembrance of the dead.
Gallaga said the musical, created by Gabby Fernandez, would also show people the La Salle brothers’ commitment to education. “Not many people understood the idea of the brothers. This (cantata) introduces the brothers and what they did for Philippine education— how they embraced the country’s culture and tradition that make De la Salle (what it is).”

“A Fire in the Soul” was first staged in the Bacolod campus in the 50th year of the massacre, under the sponsorship of the La Salle brothers in Singapore, one reason why cast and crew, when talking about bringing the show outside the university, think the island state is the more likely destination.
But Bro. Bernard S. Oca, FSC, executive producer, would rather not raise false expectations. “It is so expensive to mount. I do not know if staging outside the university, especially in Singapore will happen.”

New cast member
This latest production has added actor Michael de Mesa to the cast, as one of the martyred brothers. Old-hands Franco Laurel, Al Gatmaitan, Jonel Mojica, Miguel Castro and Floyd Tena are the other main players.
Since De la Salle University (DLSU) has gone coeducational years after the brothers’ martyrdom, women have also been given roles in the production, including Naomi Sison as Alma Mater and Conchita Castillo and Tanya Lopez as narrators.
Ricky Gallaga, Dado Jose, Louie Zabaljauregi and veteran actor Jaime Fabregas are also narrators. Also featured are singing groups from the different La Salle campuses, including kids from La Salle Green Hills.
The cantata, part of the yearlong celebration of DLSU’s centennial in the Philippines that started last year, will  have two performances at the Teresa Yuchengco auditorium, 7th floor, Don Enrique T. Yuchengco Hall— matinee at 3 p.m., February 26, and gala at 8 p.m., February 27.
Oca said the gala staging was in honor of benefactors who were alumni and the International Association of La Sallian Universities. DLSU is hosting the meeting of presidents of member universities.
Tickets for the matinee performance on February 26 cost P200 each.  Students pay the discounted rate of P100 per ticket. For the gala show on February 27, orchestra seats are priced at P500 (regular) and P250 (students). Balcony seats cost P250 (regular) and P200 (students).

Call the DLSU Centennial Office at 5244611 local 290 or e-mail [email protected].

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
SEDUCTION
« Reply #566 on: Dec 31, 2012 at 07:50 PM »
Three gorgeous people (in SEDUCTION), a new film from Peque Gallaga. The return of the master filmmaker on celluloid. I was on the set last week of October, can't imagine the film wrapped up so fast! Trailer is up already on youtube. Showing January 30, 2013.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7STL_4p6ik
« Last Edit: Sep 13, 2013 at 11:15 PM by Mr. Hankey »

Offline jdv1229

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • DVD Guru
  • ****
  • Posts: 1,478
  • Movie Fan
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: SEDUCTION
« Reply #567 on: Jan 04, 2013 at 10:30 AM »
I'm surprised that Seduction received an X-rating from the MTRCB. Direk Lore had to cut short his vacation to help re-edit the movie.

Offline keating

  • Trade Count: (+77)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,293
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: SEDUCTION
« Reply #568 on: Jan 06, 2013 at 11:33 AM »
They will start editing the film. The youtube video trailer will be edited also.

Offline jas

  • Trade Count: (+427)
  • PinoyDVD Legend
  • *****
  • Posts: 22,695
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 1237
Re: SEDUCTION
« Reply #569 on: Jan 31, 2013 at 08:12 AM »
I am guessing a lot was cut for the theatrical release. From a X-rating, it is now only R-13.

Will there be a "Director's Cut" on DVD?
« Last Edit: Jan 31, 2013 at 08:18 AM by jas »