To step foot on the man-made forest of Bohol is to tread on hallowed ground. There isn't a human soul out there that would not be captivated by the sight of these towering mahogany trees rising side by side to the sky. It must be a kingdom straight out of plant lore, in that every direction the eye takes is one eternally pervaded by the presence of these trees. Here, life is in a state of unmatched ubiquity. The silence, combined with the windy whispers and rustling of foliage,
inspires a much-welcome chill to trace the length of one's diminutive
spine. In between the intricate system of leaves and branches shaped and weaved on so many heights, shafts of light pour through spaces to bathe the earth with a tender warmth. It is, in many ways, akin to standing directly beneath the dome of a majestic cathedral - the sanctuary in front, endless rows of pews and columns behind, rays of light streaming down from rose windows to coalesce on the floor, leaving shadowy patterns in their wake. Here, like in those holy places of worship, sanctity is unquestionably accorded.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Monday, May 28, 2012
Oscarthon Year Two II: The Results
In the previous post - right here - we tackled the seventy-four films we saw as part of our second annual Oscars marathon. Now it's time to release our humble verdicts on the acting categories and our list of the best films, or those that appealed to us, touched our souls, displayed some semblance of truth and humanity, whatever. Everything is purely opinion, and opinions are highly welcome. Note that all, including the honorable mentions, are listed in order of descending favor. If a choice tickles your brain, if it gets you curious, if it seems so un-Oscar-ly, then the pleasure is ours (say what?).
I. SUPPORTING ACTOR
I. SUPPORTING ACTOR
1. Ezra Miller, We Need to Talk About Kevin
2. Christopher Plummer, Beginners
3. Patton Oswalt, Young Adult
4. Brad Pitt, The Tree of Life
5. Albert Brooks, Drive
HONORABLE MENTIONS: Jeremy Irons, Margin Call; George Clooney, The Ides of March; Charlie Day, Horrible Bosses; Corey Stoll, Midnight in Paris; Seth Rogen, 50/50; Max von Sydow, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close; John C. Reilly, Cedar Rapids & We Need to Talk About Kevin; Alex Shaffer, Win Win; Viggo Mortensen, A Dangerous Method; Kenneth Branagh, My Week with Marilyn; Jonah Hill, Moneyball; Jim Broadbent, The Iron Lady; Jan Cornet, The Skin I Live In; Jose Julian, A Better Life; Noe Hernandez, Miss Bala; Nanni Moretti, We Have a Pope.
II. SUPPORTING ACTRESS
1. Carey Mulligan, Shame
2. Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids
3. Jessica Chastain, Take Shelter
4. Sareh Bayat, A Separation
5. Charlotte Gainsbourg, Melancholia
HONORABLE MENTIONS: Octavia Spencer, The Help; Shailene Woodley, The Descendants; Amy Ryan, Win Win; Jennifer Aniston, Horrible Bosses; Jessica Chastain, The Tree of Life & The Help; Dagmara Dominczyk, Higher Ground; Vanessa Redgrave, Coriolanus & Anonymous; Janet McTeer, Albert Nobbs; Kathy Bates, Midnight in Paris; Amara Miller, The Descendants; Bryce Dallas Howard, The Help; Judi Dench, My Week with Marilyn; Kim Wayans, Pariah; Sandra Bullock, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close; Sophie Nelisse, Monsieur Lazhar; Cate Blanchett, Hanna; Pernell Walker, Pariah.
III. LEAD ACTOR
1. Michael Fassbender, Shame
2. Michael Shannon, Take Shelter
3. Demian Bichir, A Better Life
4. Jean Dujardin, The Artist
5. Brad Pitt, Moneyball
HONORABLE MENTIONS: Tom Cullen & Chris New, Weekend; Joseph Gordon-Levitt, 50/50; Michel Piccoli, We Have a Pope; Anton Yelchin, Like Crazy; Paul Giammati, Win Win; Peter Mullan, Tyrannosaur; Peyman Moaadi, A Separation; George Clooney, The Descendants; Dominic Cooper, The Devil's Double; Woody Harrelson, Rampart; Tom Hardy, Warrior; David Thewlis, The Lady; Hunter McCracken, The Tree of Life.
IV. LEAD ACTRESS
1. Tilda Swinton, We Need to Talk About Kevin
2. Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady
3. Olivia Colman, Tyrannosaur
4. Juliette Binoche, Certified Copy
5. Jeong-Hie Yun, Poetry
HONORABLE MENTIONS: Viola Davis, The Help; Charlize Theron, Young Adult; Michelle Williams, My Week with Marilyn; Berenice Bejo, The Artist; Vera Farmiga, Higher Ground; Elena Anaya, The Skin I Live In; Michelle Yeoh, The Lady; Elle Fanning, Super 8; Felicity Jones, Like Crazy; Kirsten Dunst, Melancholia; Adepero Oduye, Pariah; Charlotte Rampling, The Eye of the Storm.
V. THE TOP TEN FILMS
1. Midnight in Paris
2. Bridesmaids
3. Shame
4. Tyrannosaur
5. A Separation
6. Weekend
7. The Artist
8. The Descendants
9. Like Crazy
10. Anonymous
THE NEXT THIRTEEN: The Help; We Have a Pope; 50/50; Young Adult; Carnage; We Need to Talk About Kevin; My Week with Marilyn; The Eye of the Storm; Certified Copy; Super 8; Take Shelter; Drive; Le Quattro Volte.
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Oscarthon Year Two I: The Films
We're pretty confident ours is the very last of the posts concerning the 84th Oscars or the film awards season that came to pass just some months ago. And if you're wondering why we're somehow out of touch with time, resurrecting a corpse long dead, so to speak, it's because we took to heart the pleasure of watching seventy-four of the season's contenders. We're not just talking about the Oscars here; everyone knows that ceremony is all about politics. If you want a true (or truer, depending on your take) opinion on the 'best of the best', go to the critics - Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times, A.O. Scott of The New York Times, Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian, to name a few.
We lament the fact that a lot of outstanding films and performances get overlooked or totally ignored every year not least because majority of the voting membership of these award-giving bodies never even get to see them. Whether it's due to 'time constraints' or of their own volition is another discussion entirely. How many of the Academy voters, for example, can claim to have witnessed Olivia Colman and Peter Mullan's powerful duo in Tyrannosaur, or Tom Cullen and Chris New's deeply poignant gay couple in Weekend? Heck, if the Oscars were truly a celebration of film, A Serious Man would have won over The Hurt Locker back in 2010.
Also, we'd like to point out that more young actors are churning out finer performances these days: Hunter McCracken in The Tree of Life, the leads of Hugo, Thomas Horn's troubled protagonist in Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, the cast of Super 8, among others. Read Michael Barthel's two cents on the matter in this article.
The seventy-four - yes, you read that right earlier - that we saw were plucked from the major film awards, the critics' awards, and the critics' lists. The glaring absence of a film that any pundit (yes, we fancy ourselves that term) would consider necessary viewing means we were incapable of procuring a respectable or watchable copy of the film, the lack of English subtitles for foreign titles, or such technicalities. As much as we take pride in the fact that we saw all but Kinyarwanda in Ebert's top ten list, we are also ashamed to admit we haven't watched Footnote, 13 Assassins, Margaret, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, etc.
Don't mistake us for irrelevant fools; see, instead, that what we have to say may as well be a reflection, an afterthought, of the season that was. Here are the seventy-four (from first viewed to last) and our thoughts, plus the performances that caught our eyes.
Moneyball - Brad Pitt makes baseball so much more interesting.
The Tree of Life - Um, the dinosaurs looked great...?
Drive - Ryan Gosling, part I.
The Ides of March - Ryan Gosling, part II.
The Help - best ensemble of the season.
Margin Call - Jeremy Irons in an eleven o'clock saving-grace number.
A Better Life - Esteban from Weeds finally makes it!
Bridesmaids - second best ensemble of the season.
Midnight in Paris - charming and breathtakingly romantic.
Submarine - a winning piece on mundane teenage troubles.
Cedar Rapids - Someone that naive sleeps with his teacher?!
Another Earth - The space strawberries scene is priceless.
Win Win - because Giamatti was ignored for Barney's Version.
Attack the Block - It's raining Gollums!
The Debt - Jessica Chastain outshines them all.
The Kid with a Bike - Hey, Thomas Doret, you brat!
Bellflower - What's this about, again?
Horrible Bosses - Jennifer Aniston! Kevin Spacey!
Attenberg - Them Greeks have a weird way of being sex-deprived.
Terri - A bunch of misfits expecting (and somehow getting) sympathy.
The Guard - Mad-Eye Moody turns to black comedy.
Certified Copy - The most captivating pair, yes?
A Separation - Liar, liar, pants on fire!
Jane Eyre - Why are Wasikowska's eyes eternally morose?
Beginners - first-rate cast featuring a brooding McGregor.
Kill List - a weirdo, just like its characters.
A Dangerous Method - Keira Knightley as an aspiring contortionist.
The Future - So... it's about a cat?
Anonymous - literary blasphemy made devilishly fun.
The Iron Lady - Meryl Streep is enough reason to see it.
Hanna - And the real star is (drum roll) Cate Blanchett!
Carnage - Kate Winslet + Christoph Waltz > Foster + Reilly.
We Need to Talk About Kevin - two words: Swinton and Miller.
The Descendants - Get ready for huge closeups of George Clooney.
Trust - Every pre- and pubescent girl should watch this.
Beautiful Boy - another drama-seeking couple.
The Beaver - Mel Gibson in a performance that works? Still possible.
Weekend - poignant, heartfelt, subtly stirring.
Hugo - deserves an award for best use of colors in a film.
J. Edgar - Jack from Titanic shouts, "Oscar!" but not loud enough.
Young Adult - insanely funny. Hahaha.
Like Crazy - love story of the year.
My Week with Marilyn - every West End fanatic's sort-of-dream cast.
50/50 - How do we love thee, JGL? Let us count the ways.
Martha Marcy May Marlene - Moral: Don't join a cult.
Take Shelter - Michael Shannon + Jessica Chastain.
Shame - Michael Fassbender + Carey Mulligan.
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - spy film crafted with much British finesse.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Noomi wins; Fincher beats Oplev.
Tyrannosaur - Mullan and Colman is the couple of the year.
The Skin I Live In - Bravo, Elena Anaya!
The Devil's Double - Dominic Cooper literally shouting: Oscar!
Albert Nobbs - Even Glenn Close wasn't enough to save this.. thing.
The Lady - the geisha Mameha in a chillingly realistic performance.
Rampart - Hello there, Audra McDonald.
Pariah - a reminder that lesbian films can be this good, too.
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close - What's the point, again?
Coriolanus - Shakespeare set to modern times? It works.
Tuesday, After Christmas - long shots to convey the dreariness?
We Have a Pope - Moretti makes a riot out of the conclave.
Miss Bala - What happens in Mexico... can be impossibly mental.
Monsieur Lazhar - Moral: Make your schools suicide-proof.
Le Quattro Volte - Goat fetish. 'Nuff said.
Black Pond - Moral: Don't be too nice to strangers.
Super 8 - The youth ensemble is a gift to last the ages.
Poetry - If grandma's for real, all others should bow down before her.
War Horse - Horse fetish, anyone?
The Artist - the most charismatic film award recipient.
Le Havre - a.k.a. An Ode to the Greatness of Old-School Films.
Higher Ground - Amen, Hallelujah, Vera Farmiga!
Melancholia - Thanks for the two depressing hours.
Warrior - Mixed martial arts is now a soap opera.
The Eye of the Storm - delicious family drama laced with lunacy.
The Double Hour - a plot twist (almost) perfectly served.
The Tree of Life - Um, the dinosaurs looked great...?
Drive - Ryan Gosling, part I.
The Ides of March - Ryan Gosling, part II.
The Help - best ensemble of the season.
Margin Call - Jeremy Irons in an eleven o'clock saving-grace number.
A Better Life - Esteban from Weeds finally makes it!
Bridesmaids - second best ensemble of the season.
Midnight in Paris - charming and breathtakingly romantic.
Submarine - a winning piece on mundane teenage troubles.
Cedar Rapids - Someone that naive sleeps with his teacher?!
Another Earth - The space strawberries scene is priceless.
Win Win - because Giamatti was ignored for Barney's Version.
Attack the Block - It's raining Gollums!
The Debt - Jessica Chastain outshines them all.
THE SUPPORTING ACTRESSES
The Kid with a Bike - Hey, Thomas Doret, you brat!
Bellflower - What's this about, again?
Horrible Bosses - Jennifer Aniston! Kevin Spacey!
Attenberg - Them Greeks have a weird way of being sex-deprived.
Terri - A bunch of misfits expecting (and somehow getting) sympathy.
The Guard - Mad-Eye Moody turns to black comedy.
Certified Copy - The most captivating pair, yes?
A Separation - Liar, liar, pants on fire!
Jane Eyre - Why are Wasikowska's eyes eternally morose?
Beginners - first-rate cast featuring a brooding McGregor.
Kill List - a weirdo, just like its characters.
A Dangerous Method - Keira Knightley as an aspiring contortionist.
The Future - So... it's about a cat?
Anonymous - literary blasphemy made devilishly fun.
The Iron Lady - Meryl Streep is enough reason to see it.
THE SUPPORTING ACTORS
Hanna - And the real star is (drum roll) Cate Blanchett!
Carnage - Kate Winslet + Christoph Waltz > Foster + Reilly.
We Need to Talk About Kevin - two words: Swinton and Miller.
The Descendants - Get ready for huge closeups of George Clooney.
Trust - Every pre- and pubescent girl should watch this.
Beautiful Boy - another drama-seeking couple.
The Beaver - Mel Gibson in a performance that works? Still possible.
Weekend - poignant, heartfelt, subtly stirring.
Hugo - deserves an award for best use of colors in a film.
J. Edgar - Jack from Titanic shouts, "Oscar!" but not loud enough.
Young Adult - insanely funny. Hahaha.
Like Crazy - love story of the year.
My Week with Marilyn - every West End fanatic's sort-of-dream cast.
50/50 - How do we love thee, JGL? Let us count the ways.
Martha Marcy May Marlene - Moral: Don't join a cult.
THE LEAD ACTRESSES
Take Shelter - Michael Shannon + Jessica Chastain.
Shame - Michael Fassbender + Carey Mulligan.
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy - spy film crafted with much British finesse.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Noomi wins; Fincher beats Oplev.
Tyrannosaur - Mullan and Colman is the couple of the year.
The Skin I Live In - Bravo, Elena Anaya!
The Devil's Double - Dominic Cooper literally shouting: Oscar!
Albert Nobbs - Even Glenn Close wasn't enough to save this.. thing.
The Lady - the geisha Mameha in a chillingly realistic performance.
Rampart - Hello there, Audra McDonald.
Pariah - a reminder that lesbian films can be this good, too.
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close - What's the point, again?
Coriolanus - Shakespeare set to modern times? It works.
Tuesday, After Christmas - long shots to convey the dreariness?
We Have a Pope - Moretti makes a riot out of the conclave.
THE LEAD ACTORS
Miss Bala - What happens in Mexico... can be impossibly mental.
Monsieur Lazhar - Moral: Make your schools suicide-proof.
Le Quattro Volte - Goat fetish. 'Nuff said.
Black Pond - Moral: Don't be too nice to strangers.
Super 8 - The youth ensemble is a gift to last the ages.
Poetry - If grandma's for real, all others should bow down before her.
War Horse - Horse fetish, anyone?
The Artist - the most charismatic film award recipient.
Le Havre - a.k.a. An Ode to the Greatness of Old-School Films.
Higher Ground - Amen, Hallelujah, Vera Farmiga!
Melancholia - Thanks for the two depressing hours.
Warrior - Mixed martial arts is now a soap opera.
The Eye of the Storm - delicious family drama laced with lunacy.
The Double Hour - a plot twist (almost) perfectly served.
P.S. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 was not taken into consideration; we're fanatics of the series and so, would not have been able to pass the clearest of judgments.
Thursday, May 24, 2012
The (Chocolate) Hills Are Alive
From the website of the province of Bohol:
"The Chocolate Hills are probably Bohol's most famous tourist attraction.
They look like giant mole hills, or as some say, women's breasts, and
remind us of the hills in a small child's drawing. Most people... can hardly believe that these hills are
not a man-made artifact... this idea is quickly abandoned, as the
effort would surely surpass the construction of the pyramids in Egypt.
The chocolate hills consist of are no less than 1268 hills (some claim
this to be the exact number). They are very uniform in shape and mostly
between 30 and 50 meters high. They are covered with grass, which, at
the end of the dry season, turns chocolate brown. From this color, the
hills derive their name. At other times, the hills are green, and the
association may be a bit difficult to make."
You gotta love the similes.
It was mid-morning and summer in the Central Visayas. The sun was intent on burning every square inch of skin in sight. The principle behind these photos (Nokia C3-00, for the nth time) was point and shoot. No time to measure the angles, calibrate the framing, all that photography shiz. And as always, before uploading, no editing, no Adobe Photoshop - just the original pics.
Ascent.
Tree.
Stump.
Flowers and Tank.
Road.
Countryside.
Home base.
Standard.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Late Afternoon in Bohol
We arrived at Tagbilaran port at roughly 3:30PM, hoping to catch the 4:10 ferry back to Cebu instead of our original 6-ish. Guess what? 4:10's fully booked. What do we do, lounge around the place?
For a gateway to a premiere tourist destination and nature hotspot, the port terminal was a messy watering hole straight out of an African safari. Seriously, they should fix the place. People were scattered all over the place, the atmosphere was sweltering, seats were not enough. I was sweaty, children were crying, pieces of luggage dominated the floor. What a change of scene that must have been for the departing tourists.
An idea hit me. We spied a herd of idle taxis outside and headed for it.
"What's the most... sosyal, high-end, hotel here in Tagbilaran?"
The men looked at us. "Bohol Tropics," one of them said.
"How much would it cost us to get there?"
"We'll have to do flat rates. P100 for the three of you," the eager one replied.
Screw you! The influence of bitch taxis from Manila is indeed spreading all over the country like an epidemic.
"Take a trike, that will be cheaper," he said. Idiot.
It took us P30 and less than five minutes by trike to get to Bohol Tropics Resort. Looked impressive, all majestic and wide open spaces and green paint and lots of plants. We ended up eating their halo-halo and sandwiches at the cafe on the terrace overlooking the sea.
But to my mother's horror and disgust, the only female restroom for public use in the place was an untidy stink hole. The floor was evidently unmopped. There was unflushed feces in one of the bowls. (Okay, I realize that's disgusting.) Their reason for this extremely disappointing display? The janitor in charge went to mass. Here's another photo (Nokia C3-00) to wash away the imagery. Those guys might as well be parted lovers.
Claudined the Other Way
The weekend of "Thrilla in NAIA" a.k.a. when, in the urban wilderness of Manila Airport's Terminal 3, sort-of-powerful sorta-journalist got into a brawl with husband of famous actress after HFA caught SPSJ videotaping FA while she roasted employee of inefficient trash budget airline over baggage problems, I was in Cebu. Internet memes now define 'claudined' - a neologism, in case one gets bamboozled - as to lose one's tact and breeding in a state of anger (yes, that makes it a verb - I suspect it can also be an adjective, like "Rosalinda becomes a claudined zombie when her sister is around).
Here is a cellphone picture I took as our plane departed Mactan Airport on an early Tuesday morning bound for Iloilo. Some of the city's landmarks, the trained eye might recognize - Waterfront Hotel Mactan just behind the terminal building, and in the distance, castle-like Waterfront Hotel, Crown Regency Hotel and Towers (the tallest structure in the city), and Marco Polo Plaza on the hills, to name a few.
The twenty minutes or so that preceded this takeoff, however, was the highlight of the morning. Our flight was scheduled to commence boarding at 5:40AM for a 6:10AM departure. Because of taxi issues at the hotel (bitch taxis also exist in Cebu, we discovered), we arrived at the airport a few minutes before 5:30. We breezed through check-in as there was miraculously no line - the 60+ other passengers, I overheard the attendants, were already done. So, as planned, I waited near the terminal fee counters while Mother and Sister exited the building to buy Cebu's famous lechon at an outlet across the street.
When they returned not a short while later, the PA system came to life and screamed for all the world to hear, "Calling the last three passengers of AirPhil Expess flight blah to Iloilo, please board the aircraft now." We fell in line to pay our terminal fees. "Final call for boarding for the last three remaining passengers..." We arrived at the final security check. "Calling the last three passengers..." And they announced our names!
It was 5:40AM. What the heck?! We were supposed to just start boarding at this time and now they have everyone onboard except us? We even had one of their attendants personally escort us like lost schoolchildren all the way to the stairs to the plane. Less than five minutes after we took our seats, we were rolling down the taxiway.
Lore has it that my grandfather, in those days of old when air travel was still a creepy thing, once chased after a train he was supposed to catch. I praise AirPhil Express for their efficiency, but it's just too weird a system for me. Claudine takes one of their flights, checks in, goes out to buy lechon as peace offering to the Tulfos (in your dreams!), takes a very long while outside, and gets left behind by her luggage. Oh dear.
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Kanlaon, Cloaked in Majesty
My fascination with mountains and volcanoes began before I was ten. I suppose, and I often say this, that's what you get for having an older brother who ate books as a kid. Now he only feasts on Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine and uber geeky stuff like that, but still.
I remember we had this name-game on the peaks of the Himalayan system, and another time, on the highest peaks of each continent - the Seven Summits, they are called. On the former, I still remember Everest (duh!), K2 (also known as Godwin Austen, thought it's actually part of the Karakoram), Kangchenjunga, Makalu, Lhotse, Dhaulagiri, Annapurna, Nanga Parbat, Nanda Devi; for the latter, there's Everest (again), Kilimanjaro, McKinley, Aconcagua, Elbrus, Vinson Massif, and Kosciuzko. I think I may have sounded a bit nerdy there.
And then there are the volcanoes - to name a few, Etna on Sicily, Santorini and its ginormous volcanic past (and - bonus - the lore of Atlantis), Mt. St. Helens over at Washington state, and the mother of all volcanic topics: Hawaii. That must be why I found the cinematography of The Descendants, um, captivating. (Yes, it's possible to be confronted with huge close-ups of George Clooney's morose face and be the least bit moved.) I suppose someday I'd eventually meet someone out there who'd find this excess of trivia in my brain... sexy. "Hey there, has anyone ever told you how much you resemble Kilauea? I mean, deep down, you're all hot stuff." And before I forget, Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea are miles taller than Everest if we start at the bottom of the sea, okay?
So now, behold the following photos, captured once again with my beloved Nokia C3-00. One of the best reasons to fly the Iloilo-Cebu vv. route is the chance to gaze at the beauty of Mt. Kanlaon - 2,435m high and just 30km southeast of the major city of Bacolod.
From the mountain climbers and hiker's haven Pinoy Mountaineer, run by Dr. Gideon Lasco of UP College of Medicine 2010:
"The country's largest active volcano and Visayas' highest mountain is
Mt. Kanlaon in Negros Island. As the highest mountain in the Visayas, it
is majestic. As the country's largest active volcano, it is fearsome.
Its majesty lies in its forests, waterfalls, lagoons, and culminates in
its crater, vast and desolate." (pinoymountaineer.com)
The first two photos were taken on the morning Iloilo-Cebu flight of AirPhil Express, Saturday, May 5, and the last two, on the return trip three days later. Notice the volcano's distinctive shave around its peak - a crown, if metaphor-speak be allowed - and how the clouds, in the fashion of literature, become its 'white cloak of majesty'.
Yep, I just said that... white cloak of majesty. Think I just made lots of dead people proud of me.
Friday, May 18, 2012
Visayas from a Plane
To be in two places at once has always been a mind-tickling idea. I think of A Walk to Remember, the Mandy Moore film based on the Nicholas Sparks novel. I think of physics and quantum mechanics, then I realize I don't really know much about that. I think of Nightcrawler in the X-Men movies - blue-skinned Allan Cumming with a prehensile tail - but oh wait, that's teleportation.
It's not really omnipresence, or god-like ubiquity. It's more the thought of breaking free from the singularity of place. It's about tearing down a limited human dimension, and in the process, see more than just what is.
For now, we settle on 'bird's eye view' - seeing more than one place at a time, in this case three. The photo was taken aboard AirPhil Express' early morning Cebu-Iloilo flight on Tuesday, May 8. The foreground is the northern end of Negros island; the thin strip of land on the middle-right is Cebu, and above it, almost an extension of the clouds, is Leyte. My camera is a Nokia C3-00, if offended DSLR users are wondering.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Old Mr. Pork Tendon
Old Chinese man selling dried pork tendon barges into the store. I'm the one in charge while Mother is at the salon. Dear Lord, what infernal punishment is this? The following conversation takes place in Hokkien.
Man: Boy, is your mother here?
Me: Uh no, she's away.
Man: Where's your father?
Me: He's on his way.
Man: Oh. (Senses the perfect opportunity to *fool* me.) Well you have to buy these pork tendons, really good, P260 only.
Me: Uh, yeah, let me call Mother first.
Man: Ah yes, okay okay, do that.
I attempt to call Mother. Takes a very long to establish a connection. Then, she answers.
Mother: Yow punk, what is up? (That's basically the essence of what she says.)
Me: Uh, are you gonna buy dried pork tendons?
Mother: Ohow! Is the old Chinese man there? (She says exactly that. Apparently, old Chinese man is a regular. Then again, my parents have to deal with secondhand fame in the Ilonggo Chinese community, courtesy of my paternal grandfather, God bless his soul.)
Me: Spot on, woman.
Mother: Tell him we're not getting yet.
Me: (Relieved that Chinese man will have to leave soon.) Suree you beauty.
Then to old Chinese man, whom I've asked to sit. He's admiring our images of the Chinese gods. Yes, it's requisite for every Chinese business establishment to have them.
Me: Mother says we're not getting yet.
Man: Oh, okay okay, I better get going then. So your Mother says you're not going to sell?
I'm confused. In Hokkien Chinese, the words for 'buy' and 'sell' are both buei, just that the former uses the first (higher) tone and the latter, the fourth (harder) tone.
Me: We're not gonna sell?
Man: You're not gonna sell?
Me: Uh, I'm sorry?
Man: Oh boy, you gotta go brush up on your Hokkien, huh? You're gonna need it someday.
Me: Uh, yeah man, I don't understand your mumbling?
Of course I don't say that. I just smile as he exits, smile like an ambassador for peace
Monday, April 30, 2012
An Outstanding Outstanding Circle
And so April ends - with two short stories, three novels, seven films, a (back-to-high-school) haircut, a new dog, and a reunion.
I haven't written much since I came home, and that's understating it; then again, I do have the stories for an excuse. The novels and films are a result of my effort to be as non-medical as possible this summer. I am still reeling from Michael Shannon and Michael Fassbender in Take Shelter and Shame, respectively. The haircut is my mother's brainchild, and the dog is adorable and noisy. My sister named her Glinda, so now we have Elphaba the labradour and Glinda the golden retriever.
But last night's reunion is what I mainly want to talk about here.
There is an organization in the province known as the Outstanding Students Circle of Iloilo (OSCI). Every year, it awards ten elementary and ten secondary school students based on their academic grades in school, a list of co-curricular activities, a written examination (ala college entrance exams, but even more challenging), and a personal interview. So yeah, it's pretty tough to make the cut, as everyone - public, private, government, science high school - is mixed in a single category. To be an awardee is virtually to be given lifetime membership to this circle of great people and great things.
The website, including a backgrounder:
http://outstandingstudentscircleofiloilo.blogspot.com
http://outstandingstudentscircleofiloilo.blogspot.com
And for the curious:
1.
http://outstandingstudentscircleofiloilo.blogspot.com/2009/02/ten-outstanding-secondary-school.html
http://outstandingstudentscircleofiloilo.blogspot.com/2009/02/ten-outstanding-secondary-school.html
* The top 1 of the elementary and high school categories are tasked to deliver responses on behalf of the awardees.
The high school category awardees, back in March 2009. Pardon the size; I just grabbed this from the website.
OSCI alumni (the awards began in 2006) plus the organizers, April 29, 2012. I surmise there should be at least seventy of us, but there you go. Photo by Queenie Umadhay.
Now if I may insert my warranted opinion: What I really like about this circle is the fact that, unlike elsewhere (that includes scholarly circles of the intellectual elite in college, if you know what I mean), people here don't rub their 'outstanding-ness' in your face. In fact, if you happen to enter a room full of OSCI people, you wouldn't think they're that. The creme de la creme, so to speak, never feeling the need to shout to the world, "Hey, look at me, I'm outstanding!" And that's precisely why it's a prestigious honor to be part of the circle.
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