Panaghoy sa Suba
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Panaghoy sa Suba (The Call of the River) |
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File:Panaghoyposter.jpg
Panaghoy sa Suba poster
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Directed by | Cesar Montano |
Produced by | Cesar Montano |
Written by | Cris Vertido |
Starring | Cesar Montano Juliana Palermo Jackie Woo Joel Torre Ronnie Lazaro Rebecca Lusterio Daria Ramirez Caridad Sanchez Suzette Ranillo Disi Alba Philip Anthony Reiven Bulado Dr. Warfe Engracia Chelo Espina Flora Gasser Rommel Montano Rowald Montano Ramon Villanueva |
Music by | Nonong Buencamino |
Cinematography | Ely Cruz |
Edited by | Renato de Leon |
Distributed by | CM Films Inc. |
Release dates
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2004 |
Running time
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2 hours |
Country | Philippines |
Language | Boholano with English captions; Tagalog; Japanese; English |
Budget | ₱25,000,000.00 |
Box office | P 15,844,266.01 |
Panaghoy sa Suba, titled "The Call of the River" in English, also referred to as "Cry of the River"[1] is a 2004 film produced, directed and starred by Filipino actor Cesar Montano. It features Filipino actors Juliana Palermo, Jackie Woo, Phil Anthony, Reiven Bulado, Caridad Sanchez, Joel Torre, Daria Ramirez, Ronnie Lazaro, Suzette Ranillo, Rommel Montano, Dr. Warfe Engracia, Ramon Villanueva, Chelo Espina, Flora Gasser, Disi Alba and Rebecca Lusterio.[2]
A historical Second World War drama and romance, the film was shot in Bohol, Philippines.[3] It is a mixture of action, drama, romance, and history.
The film is Cesar Montano's directorial debut. One of the producers was R.D. Alba, who had attended the Los Angeles Film School. It was filmed mostly in the Visayan language with an almost exclusively Visayan cast.[4]
It was given an "A" rating by the Cinema Evaluation Board or CEB of the Film Development Council of the Philippines and was CM Films' entry to the 2004 Metro Manila Film Festival.[5] The CEB described Cesar Montano's direction as "meticulous but light-handed." It turned "a somewhat rambling and slow screenplay into a poetic, sometimes even magical, current of silent struggle and survival."[5]
The Call of the River is a multiple award-winner. It won Second Best Picture (to Mano Po 3), Best Director, Best Supporting Actress, Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Musical Score, Gatpuno Villegas Cultural Award at the Metro Manila Film Festival, 2004;[6] and Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress at Gawad Suri Awards, Manila, 2005.[7]
Panaghoy sa Suba, which garnered 16 awards and 11 nominations[2] including 5 from the Metro Manila Film Festival, was also given an endorsement by the UNESCO.[4] It was named Best Picture at the "International Festival of Independent Films" held in Brussels, Belgium. Montano was also chosen Best Director.[8] In addition, Montano also won Best Actor in Panaghoy sa Suba in the Golden Screen Awards.[9]
Panaghoy sa Suba was invited as an exhibition in the Tous les Cinemas du Monde (Movies of the World) at the Cannes Film Festival in 2005.[10][11] It has also been invited for exhibition in other international film festivals in Berlin, Toronto, Tokyo, Korea and in the Czech Republic’s "Karlo Vary Film Festival".[11] It was shown at the Shanghai International Film Festival on June 11 to 19, 2005—its second international screening after Cannes (World Cinema category, non-competition). Panaghoy was also shown at the New Delhi’s Asian Festival of Asian Cinema on July 15 to 24, 2005.[12]
Contents
Plot
The film tells the story of a love-triangle set in Bohol during World War II; though the main underlying themes deals with Filipino nationalism and the legacies of colonialism.
The story takes place on the island province of Bohol, located in Central Visayas, before and during the Japanese Occupation of the Philippines. Duroy (played by Cesar Montano) is a banca operator who is in love with Iset (played by Juliana Palermo), the most bewitching girl in a village where the main thoroughfare is the river. Iset is an obedient child whose father and materialistic aunt hope that she will marry the American businessman she works for, and thereby marry "up" into wealth and status instead of marrying one of the hard-working Filipino village men.
The resident American businessman, John Smith (played by Philip Anthony), is an abusive, rude and stingy landowner, but he has taken notice of Iset's beauty and is interested in her—although it is not clear if he is considering her as a wife or merely as a mistress. Iset, however, has made it plain that she likes Duroy who she asked to express his love in a letter. Duroy takes his time in trying to win the love of his life, but Ibô (Reiven Bulado), Duroy's brother, is also smitten with Iset and moves more quickly. Since Duroy adores his family and does not want to get in his brother's way, he stops courting Iset.
Duroy is devoted to his family, who now only consists of his mother (Daria Ramirez), Ibô and his sister, Bikay (multi-awarded former child star Rebecca Lusterio). Duroy's father left them earlier to go off with an American (This last plot element is not conveyed in the film's English subtitles). Heartbroken and ill, Duroy's mother eventually dies when they have no more money to buy medicine.
Smith sees Ibo talking with Iset at the warehouse and fires him on the spot. Ibo tries to kill Smith. Smith successfully fights for his life and kills Ibo in self-defense instead. Duroy vows revenge.
When the Japanese invasion begins, Mr. Smith is drafted into the American army and has to leave the village. The commander of Japanese forces that garrison the village after the Americans are defeated also notices Iset, and her aunt makes plans to marry Iset to the Japanese officer. Meanwhile, many of the men flee to the mountains while the women and children remain with the American priest in the village.
Several years pass. Duroy and his men in the mountains launch an attack against the Japanese garrison. The Japanese respond by taking hostages and killing the priest. Eventually a mixed group of Filipino and American troops arrive in Bohol to help the Boholano guerrilla force defeat the Japanese troops during the Second Battle of Bohol in 1945.
Duroy kills the Japanese commander—his new rival for Iset's hand—after a long fight in the village.
Smith (mockingly dubbed "White Balls" by Duroy and his friends) returns after the war over expecting life to continue as it was before the Japanese invasion. Duroy attacks him, beats him up and humiliates him but stops short of killing him. Iset refuses Smith's clumsy offer to renew their relationship and chooses Duroy.
The end implies a once-more blossoming romance between Iset and Duroy.
Cast
- Cesar Montano – Duroy
- Juliana Palermo – Iset
- Reiven Bulado – Ibô (Duroy's brother)
- Daria Ramirez – Duroy's mother
- Rebecca Lusterio – Bikay (Duroy's sister)
- Jackie Woo – Fumio Okohara (Japanese Army officer)
- Philip Anthony (as Phil Anthony) – John Smith
- Caridad Sanchez – Aunt Lahi
- Joel Torre – Damian
- Ronnie Lazaro –
- Suzette Ranillo –
- Rommel Montano –
- Dr. Warfe Engracia –
- Ramon Villanueva –
- Chelo Espina –
- Disi Alba –
Awards
- Metro Manila Film Festival, 2004 (won)
- Best Screenplay – Cris Vertido (won)
- Best Cinematography – Ely Cruz (won)
- Best Musical Score – Nonong Buencamino (won)
- Best Supporting Actress – Rebecca Lusterio (won)[13]
- Gatpuno Antonio J. Villegas Cultural Award – CM Films (won)
- Best Director – Cesar Montano (won)[13]
- Second Best Picture[13]
- Film Academy of the Philippine Awards, or FAP, Philippines 2005
- Best Cinematography – Ely Cruz (won)
- Best Musical Scoring – Nonog Buencamino (won)
- Best Screenplay – Cris Vertido (won)
- Best Director – Cesar Montano (nominated)
- Best Picture (nominated)
- Best Sound (nominated)
- Best Supporting Actor – Ronnie Lazaro(nominated)
- Best Supporting Actress – Daria Ramirez(nominated)
- Gawad Urian Awards, 2005
- Best Actor – Cesar Montano (won)
- Best Cinematography – Ely Cruz (won)
- Best Direction – Cesar Montano (won)
- Best Music – Nonog Buencamino (won)
- Best Picture – (won)
- Best Sound – (won)
- Best Editing – Renato de Leon (nominated)
- Best Production Design (Pinakamahusay na Disenyong Pamproduksiyon) – Allan Leyres and Ron Heri Tan (nominated)
- Best Screenplay (Pinakamahusay na Dulang Pampelikula) – Cris Vertido(nominated)
- Best Supporting Actor (Pinakamahusay na Pangalawang Aktor) – Jacky Woo (nominated)
- Best Supporting Actress (Pinakamahusay na Pangalawang Aktres) – Rebecca Lusterio (nominated)
- Best Supporting Actress (Pinakamahusay na Pangalawang Aktres) – Juliana Palermo(nominated)
References
- ↑ Cry me a river no more for Pinoy film industry www.nordis.net Retrieved 4 December 2006.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Panaghoy sa Suba (The Call of the River) 2004 www.imdb.com Retrieved 29 November 2006.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Panaghoy sa Suba www.thefreeman.com Retrieved 30 November 2006.[dead link]
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ And the winners are... www.abs-cbn.com Retrieved 30 November 2006.
- ↑ The Call of the River www.cinemaya.net Retrieved 30 November 2006.
- ↑ Two Pinoy films triumph at international film fests www.abs-cbnnews.com Retrieved 30 November 2006.
- ↑ Congrats sa mga Winners ng Golden Screen Awards www.abs-cbn.com Retrieved 30 November 2006.
- ↑ Panagahoy sa Suba (Call of the river) to Cannes Filmfest www.newsflash.org Retrieved 30 November 2006.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Cesar Montano’s Panaghoy... to screen in Cannes filmfest www.filipinoreporter.com Retrieved 30 November 2006.
- ↑ More Pinoy Films To Int’l Filmfests www.newsflash.org Retrieved 4 December 2006.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 Award Winning Movies MMFF Regal Films Retrieved January 30, 2007.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Panaghoy sa Suba |
- Articles with dead external links from March 2015
- Pages with broken file links
- Visayan culture
- 2004 films
- Philippine films
- Culture of Bohol
- Visayan-language films
- Tagalog-language films
- English-language films
- Japanese-language films
- Directorial debut films
- World War II films
- Japanese occupation of the Philippines films
- Cinematography
- Ely Cruz