Cinemalaya 20 Hails Docufiction Tumandok for Best Film

MARIAN RIVERA, GABBY PADILLA, ENZO OSORIO RECEIVE ACTING AWARDS

The docufiction film on the plight of the Ati community in Sitio Karabankalan brings home the prestigious Balanghai trophy for Best Film in the 20th edition of the Cinemalaya Philippine Independent Film Festival.

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Film for the Full Length Category – Tumandok

 

Directed by Iloilo-based filmmakers Arlie Sweet Sumagaysay and Richard Jeroui Salvadico, TUMANDOK was cited for “its focus on a marginalized sector of Philippine society, its nearly epic sweep of the life and landscape of a people disempowered by the wealthy and the powerful and victimized by government neglect and corruption, its highly convincing characters and effective ensemble acting by a cast of non-professional actors, and for its highly effective filmmaking in defense of the rights of indigenous people to their ancestral domain.”



Cinemalaya 20 Best Supporting Actor – Felipe Ganancial

 

The film also bagged the Best Supporting Actor for Felipe Ganancial, Best Screenplay, Best Original Score, and NETPAC Award for Best Film in the Full-Length Category.

 

Cinemalaya 20 Orgcomm and Jury Members With Full Length Winners

 
Ganancial got the award for “his very impressive performance as elder and chieftain trying to keep his people together in their steadfast but non-violent fight to keep their ancestral land despite violence and intimidation by the wealthy and the powerful.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Screenplay for the Full Length Film Category – Tumandok

 
Tumandok’s script, co-written by Arden Rod Condez with Arlie Sweet Sumagaysay, was cited for “taking as its subject matter a sector that’s relegated to the margins of society, and its powerful tale of an indigenous people’s resolve to keep their ancestral land in the face of corruption and violence.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Original Music Score – Paulo Almaden and the Ati People of Kabarankalan and Nagpana

 
Paulo Almaden and The Ati People of Kabarankalan and Nagpana won Best Original Score for “their highly effective use of ancient songs and ethnic instrumentation to complement its powerful depiction of an indigenous people’s fight for its ancestral domain.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 NETPAC Award for Best Full Length Film – Tumandok

 
Tumandok was praised by the NETPAC jury for “its strong inner community voice of loving their land, and admirable representation of a strong young woman character who becomes a leader behind the men.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Film for the Short Film Category – Cross My Heart and Hope to Die

 
Meanwhile, Sam Manacsa’s CROSS MY HEART AND HOPE TO DIE won Best Film in the Short Film Category for “its heartbreaking portrait of overworked and underpaid women-workers, and its subtle but mordant critique of their abuse and exploitation.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Director for the Full Length Film Category – Jaime Pacena Ii

 
Best Director Balanghai trophies go to filmmakers Jaime Pacena II and Sam Manacsa. For his film KONO BASHO, director Pacena has shown “his utter craftsmanship and expert summoning of the resources of the cinema to tell a poignant story of personal loss and family grief amid the trauma of disaster, his powerful exploration of themes of diaspora, self-discovery, and sisterhood, and his humanist vision that inspires reconciliation, renewal, and rebuilding.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Director for the Short Film Category – Sam Manacsa

 
Director Manacsa, on the other hand, takes home her second Balanghai trophy for CROSS MY HEART AND HOPE TO DIE for “effectively orchestrating the resources of cinema in its depiction of a hard-up and lonely unpaid worker and her dashed hopes for romance.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Screenplay for the Short Film Category – Primetime Mother

 
Sonny Calvento’s PRIMETIME MOTHER received the Best Screenplay award for “its savage take on Philippine television and how poor Filipinos willingly subject themselves to public humiliation for cheap fame and paltry fortune.”

Cinemalaya 20 Orgcomm and Jury Members With Short Film Winners

 

Cinemalaya 20 NETPAC Award for Best Short Film – Abogbaybay

 
The NETPAC (Network for the Promotion of Asia Pacific Cinema) Award for Best Film in the Short Film Category went to ABOGBAYBAY by P.R. Monencillo Patindol. Citation for the film mentioned its “deepest feelings of death and life and very delicate way of resurrection from grief.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Actor – Enzo Osorio

 
Enzo Osorio from THE HEARING won Best Performance of An Actor for “his sensitive and very convincing portrayal of a boy who refuses to be silent and to be silenced about his abuse.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Actress – Marian Rivera

 
Marian Rivera from BALOTA and Gabby Padilla from KONO BASHO shared the award for Best Performance of An Actress. Rivera was praised for “her spirited portrayal of a public school teacher risking life and limb to protect the sanctity of the ballot.”<
 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Actress – Gabby Padilla

 
Padilla, meanwhile, received the nod for “her sensitive and very moving portrayal of a young woman navigating the cultural complexities of a foreign funeral while coming to terms with personal loss and family grief.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Jury Member Dolly De Leon and Best Actor Enzo Osorio

 
Sue Prado for KANTIL was recognized as Best Performance of a Supporting Actress for “her effective portrayal as community leader of a coastal village of informal settlers trying to keep their unity while fighting off eviction.”

Technical awards include:

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Editing – Dominic Bekaert

 

BEST EDITING – Dominic Bekaert (AN ERRAND), for “its masterful montage of the sights and scenes of road travel as captured in the mind of a driver coping with questions of time, class, and identity.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Cinematography – Dan Villegas

 

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY – Dan Villegas (KONO BASHO), for “its highly poetic employment of light and shadow and other photographic resources in its profound exploration of themes of loss and grief, of estrangement and reconciliation, and of ruin and renewal.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Production Design – Eero Yves Francisco

 

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – Eero Yves Francisco (KONO BASHO), for “its highly effective melding of the resources of art direction to tell a poignant tale of personal loss, shared grief, and self-discovery amid the backdrop of a Japanese city recovering from the ravages of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Best Sound Design – Jedd Dumaguina and Mario Consunji

 
BEST SOUND – Jedd Dumaguina and Mario Consuji (AN ERRAND), for “creatively evoking the din and blare of highway traffic, of silence and its interstices, as they are captured in the mind of a personal driver, as he journeys from Baguio to Manila and back, contemplating questions of destiny, fantasy, and identity.”

 

Cinemalaya 20 Special Jury Prize for the Full Length Film Category – Alipato at Muog

 
The Special Jury Prize winners were ALIPATO AT MUOG by J.L. Burgos, cited for “its effective use of the resources of documentary cinema to shed light on an actual case of enforced disappearance and reveal dark truths about human rights in the Philippines.”; and PAMALANDONG SA DANOW by Breech Asher Harani, cited for “its compelling evocation of the glories of nature as seen through the eyes of two Lumad youngsters and their struggle to protect and preserve the Agusan Marsh of Mindanao.”
 

Cinemalaya 20 Orgcomm and Jury Members With Technical Awards Winners

 

Cinemalaya 20 Special Jury Prize for the Short Film Category – Pamalandong Sa Danow

 
GULAY LANG, MANONG by BC Amparado and PRIMETIME MOTHER by Sonny Calvento won the hearts of the Cinemalaya theater goers and audiences, receiving the Audience Choice Award for Full-Length and Short Film categories, respectively.

 

Cinemalaya 20 Audience Choice Award for Full Length Film – Gulay Lang, Manong

 

Cinemalaya 20 Audience Choice Award for Short Film – Primetime Mother

 

Cinemalaya 20 Orgcomm and Alumni With the Jury Members and Winners