An Australian angel pointed me to the, erm, review as I call it, of Ang Babaeng Humayo (The woman who left) I made on October 2016:
Ang Babaeng Humayo (Lav Diaz, 2016)
by
plsletitrain
» 1 year ago(Oct. 2, 2016, 9:15 p.m.)
English Translation: The Woman Who Left
There's a Philippine Movies Thread already but thought I'd make a special thread for this because I think Lav Diaz, out of all Philippine directors, is the most well-loved. Also to let it be known that I deserve another standing ovation for having watched an almost 4-hour film straight at the cinema, without the privilege of that pause button where I could do something else.
Anyway, this is my second film from Lav and this film, along with my recollection of Norte, made me realize one very reason why I think Lav perfectly embodies a distinct Philippine director with his own brand: he knows how to depict Philippine society in the simplest way, making long shots that give the viewer the opportunity to observe every angle of the scene. He hasn't been bitten by the Oscar-bait virus because although he depicts about the ills of Philippine society, he does it as genuine and as authentic as possible.
Ang Babaeng Humayo is a species of its own. It does not have terrorism, poverty, drug addiction or name any other ill of Philippine society here (well technically it has) but Lav didn't put the spotlight there. His spotlight is pointed towards the characters and their emotions.
Story revolves on the life of Horacia (Charo Santos-Concio) after having been imprisoned for 30-years for a crime she was wrongly accused of. She then embarks on a journey to seek revenge from the mastermind/ex-lover who set her up, Rodrigo Trinidad (played by Michael de Mesa). Along her journey, she meets different personas the most prominent of which were Hollanda (played by John Lloyd Cruz), an epiliptic transgender, Mameng, a borderline-crazy woman who curses Church people, and Kuba, a vendor of balut. Horacia exhibits saintly features here, being very helpful and kind to others (but her lack of concern for her children is quite contradictory). There's a good plot turn (not necessarily a twist) in the end which was quite good. I'm talking about how the "revenge" took place.
I'm glad that Lav's films get theatrical releases now. It also probably helped that this movie is top billed by an executive of a giant TV network, no? And John Lloyd Cruz. You know, if anyone owned this movie, it has to be JLC. I have a confession to make: I have never been a JLC fan. I acknowledge he can act, but I've never digged him. But after watching this movie, I just gave him a higher form of respect. I don't know what other roles he played before (I've seen him play a mentally deficient boy in The Trial) so I'm not sure if he has played a transgender role already, but he just nailed it in here. He was unrecognizable actually, it took me about how many more scenes before I realized it was him (poor lighting also contributed to it). He also had this womanly thighs and arms that made me think that it was impossible to be him but he really looked like a girl. And he acted like it.
Second honorable mention would be Nonie Buencamino. He has always been one of the veterans in the country, and he was unsurprisingly brilliant in here as the hunchback ballot vendor who was befriended by Horacia.
The film is shown in black and white but I saw colors. Maybe because Lav just manages to tell the story colorfully. It had its silent moments, but Lav makes sure you don't get to sleep. He makes sure your eye still studies the entire scene. Everything was natural.
sitenoise» 1 year ago(Oct. 6, 2016, 6:57 p.m.) The film is shown in black and white but I saw colors. Maybe because Lav just manages to tell the story colorfully.
Great line!
Maybe I'll make this my second Lav Diaz film too. I thought you had seen more of his work.
plsletitrain » 1 year ago(Oct. 6, 2016, 7:07 p.m.)
Lav's films haven't been released theatrically here until recently. The first one was that 8-hour film I told you guys about(forgot the title) which is erm, kinda, no-way I can sit in the theater through that. The 4 hours was even quite painful to be honest I think I might have slept for a minute there, with just 5 of us in the cinema. This is a good sign though (I just hope the theaters can cover for the income of showing his films). At least we now get to see his films in the big screen and not just the usual money-eating teeny weeny movies.
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@sitenoise
See, I even wrote a sitenoise movie characteristic there: "His spotlight is pointed towards the characters and their emotions."