Sunday, December 9, 2012

The Flor Contemplacion Story




Nora Aunor won her first major international acting trophy as Best Actress in 1996 Cairo International Film Festival.

Bona



Naglalayag

Nora Aunor won Best Actress in Brussels International Film Festival in 2004 for Naglalayag.



HIMALA




(CNN's Asia Best Film of All Time..Nora Aunor garnered the Best Actress Nod in 1983 Berlin International Film Festival..Himala in Official Selection in the same festival)








MOVIE REVIEW

Source: Variety, Wednesday, January 26, 1983

French-trained Filipino director Ishmael Bernal has finally reached his creative peak
and total acceptance in the Philippine film industry when HIMALA swept the major
awards at the recent Metro Manila Film Fest and then was invited to prestigiously open
the 1983 Manila International Film Festival. Bernal has long been neglected and he is
the most-nominated Manila film maker for the local critics' derby. His MANILA AFTER
DARK, however, won best picture last year.

HIMALA has also been touted as the first Tagalog picture to have been produced by
the Experimental Cinema of the Philippines, an arm of the annual MIFF for 3,000,000
pesos. It will circulate to five leading international filmfests, including the forthcomng
Berlin Film Festival, then to Cannes' Directors' Fortnight.

The film bitingly, hypnotically and realistically captures the mixed-up and often
confused rural Philippine traditions that are full of contradictions quite similar to what
was shown in Francesco Rosi's CHRIST STOPPED AT EBOLI. It is a situation where
religion, fanaticism, superstition and cliched soap opera characters intermix. The film
opens in the dappled and moody darkness of an eclipse which sets the tone of the
supernatural theme that's been blended with the harsh realities experienced by a
young girl who gets victimized by circumstances beyond her control. It is rich in details
of backward village life that should fascinate foreign viewers intrigued with exotic Third
World poverty, hunger, oriental funeral services, physical ugliness and handicapped
human bodies cinematically framed by the magic of faith healing as its main theme.

The provincial town setting is the sleepy town of Cupang (shot on location in lovely
Ilocos Norte) which was supposedly been cursed after driving away a leper. The small,
dissipated and forgotten dusty town without rainfall awakens to exploitation and
commercialism when an innocent girl called Elsa (Nora Aunor) claims to have seen an
apparition of the Blessed Virgin. She later acquires healing powers. Along the lines of
Lourdes, the whole village becomes a bustling commercial venue for mass-produced
statue saints and bottled holy or tonic water. In later excursions into subplots, a close
friend of Elsa who becomes a woman of easy virtue returns to Cupang, a virginal sister
who is totally devoted to the religious mission, some enterprising matrons, then a
kaleidoscopic look at hundreds of sick people with diseased bodies. A pivotal
character is a cynical and young film director (Spanky Manikan) with a conscience. The
latter becomes obsessed in capturing Elsa's healing sessions on celluloid which leads
to his candidly catching on film (by accident) a dark secret of Elsa, a secret which
prompted the suicide of her sister.

Here is an eloquent, powerful film that is full of grandeur and simple segments. It
shows an atmospheric environment where illiterate but adulating, praying crowds
desperate for a cure can be a hostile mob when the miracle they crave for doesn't
materialize.

Nora Aunor as Elsa gives a sensitive, polished and highly passive and consistently low
key performance. She is letter-perfect for the role. Meanwhile, Gigi Duenas (a stage
actress) as a girl on the wrong side of the tracks who operates a cabaret-whorehouse
is singularly brilliant and provides a striking contrast to the spiritual life of Elsa.
If there is anything wrong with the production, it is just the length and repetitious
sequences.

Towards the middle, a weird and starling denouement is shared with the viewers to
sustain their high level of fascination. The Tagalog screenplay is suitably hard boiled
and not affected as in common local features. There is an excellent eerie soundtrack
music.

HIMALA is the kind of quality festival film that brightens the Philippines' tarnished
name in the field of films geared for international consumption and release. The picture
brings out the fact there are more Filipino directors to discover

A Poem for Nora Aunor

A POEM FOR NORA AUNOR
BY BILLY SIENES

Railways and trains
and peddled water
are the icons
on our minds
as we wait for you
to return
with a miracle.

The stars are dimming,
waiting
for you, the Superstar
to reappear
in the murky firmament.
You, again glorious,
visible.

Come back here
where voices
are often shrill
and piercing.
Come back singing
with your voice
even more golden
than the sunrises
and sunsets
of our waiting.

Return with eyes riveting,
cast a glance
on our silver screen
that is fading.
Perform wonders again
with potrayals
of Woman, even of Man.
Blow them away
again.

You’ve had
your crucifixions,
our Superstar.
You have bled enough.
Many still believe
in your resurrection.

And in your homecoming,
it will be us
who shall offer you
waters of devotion.