Onlyme6000’s Weblog

April 1, 2009

To Be or Not To Be

Filed under: Movie Review, Personal, Reviews — onlyme6000 @ 12:00 am

Much as I would have wanted to read Shakespeare’s Hamlet for which the library has a copy of, I did not have the concentration to absorb anything other than the words that say “Enter” such and such nor was I able read any soft copy of the summary of the play or at least, a movie review. For the lack of time, guided only by a faint memory of a comic book on Hamlet which I read at leisure in high school and all these excuses, this reaction, I contend, is free from the biases of others’ opinions. I hope not too absurd an opinion. =D

Although the intro to the movie is positively biased to its creator, I was expectant of its promises as a viewer. True enough, it’s a well lit cinematography and very crisp are the lines delivered by the actors. Well lit even during the love scenes. The movie, as Shakespeare had wanted his plays to be—delivered and listened to, rather than silently read by the public, is a success as it rekindled in me an admiration of the language of long ago with all its hath’s and thou’s. Kenneth Branagh, director and actor, is some sort of a reincarnation of Shakespeare—playwright and actor to his own plays. As the poet extols his poetry and the playwright glorifies his play, the director lauds his movie as something that will be remembered for centuries. It is a wonder why so many forms emerge from the classics. Well, great is a person or a poet or a director if he can make another great person…out of you, eh? The movie is not just “another dull record,” I agree with him. It is so beautiful that I fear this kind of technology so pleasing to the senses may render the teacher less competitive to sustain the same attention of his students. On second thought, our traditional classroom and required outside readings, no matter how minimal, of say Edgar Allan Poe’s prose and Alexander Pope’s Rape of the Lock were vital not just towards being amazed of the sonority but nevertheless thankful to be able to comprehend the most if not all of it. If not for all those who loved and wrote analyses of the classics or made movies such as this, we are guided to make Shakespeare not anymore too difficult a reading material.

With extra Robin Williams articulating the word carriage both with a ruling colonizer’s /carry-YAHZH/ accent and its American variant, /CARE-ridge/, the major cast tried to present it with a touch of England (mentioned as a place where Hamlet will be exiled) which Shakespeare hails from though different a setting, Denmark.

 

 The best advice I hear is from Laertes’ father: Be quick to lend your ears but not as quick to judge anyone. Have I heard of this advice, last week would not have been disastrous. I just learned—how’s that?, even if asked for the truth, some people would prefer it to be with the sugar coat or they cuss you for being so blunt.

 The best of the “hired actors” for me is the one who delivers a piece that has Hamlet thinking what’s so moving of the character he portrays that he has to shed tears. I admired his direction (and probably being the traveling actors they are, they have been used to it) seeing the costumed king and queen engrossed with their lines as if it’s a real event with only the two of them speaking sans an audience. That must be why they give specs during a play for us to better appreciate them up close and Hamlet must climb up the stage to see King Claudius’ reaction to the play that aimed to capture his conscience. As for Queen Gertrude reaction “speak no more” for Hamlet’s words have pierced her for falling to her carnal appetite—an incestuous remarrying of the brother, of her husband two months only after the latter’s death, now unmasked as a murderer. Here we see the love of people, in the past, of re-watching anything they may have already seen or heard or read. Hamlet is questioned the title of the play and he names the adaptation The Murder of Gonzago. It holds true to this day.

The soft blue eyes of Hamlet’s uncle do not make a convincing antagonist, too sincere a face to be revealed in bad light. He is effectively casted in to create a doubt—because he is also a Christian, as to whether the attacks against his character are real, mere delusions of a son who lost a father or an interplay with a devil in disguise, for those who have no awareness of the plot. He makes himself fully developed as a villain in part two.

I envy Hamlet for the faithful friends he has. He asks two if they, not to their own bidding, are sent by his mother on account of helping out what seemed to be an insanity of his to the public and they let him hear the truth. Horatio as he advices Hamlet that if there is any inner hesitation about the king’s invitation, he should not go, is also ready to consume the poison but Hamlet stops him so their tragedy can be told. For those friends who have sworn, re-sworn and kept their oath by virtue of a ghost they see but will speak only to Hamlet. For Laertes though expressively apprehensive of Hamlet’s sincerity towards his sister, without that prior bond, he will not realize that Hamlet is not totally to blame for his father’s death. As for me I prefer now to introspect in order to evaluate if I can trust myself then I will do or if not then I will not…for even a brother can kill his own brother like what Hamlet’s uncle has done. The movie unfolds this beautiful tragedy that evokes many thoughts.

There is catharsis from the thought of murdering someone to its commission. Hamlet stops himself from running a sword through the ear of the new king to avenge his father’s death with a beautiful question—why let an unworthy king merit the purging of his soul if Hamlet justifies to take an ear for an ear, or a life for a life, when the king is to be damned for his crime; but Hamlet kills Polonius instead, thinking it is the same king. The plot has a Christian theme in this sense—conscience, afterlife, punishment, hell. Polonius death, I assume, is also brought about by his speculation, over protectiveness of his children and loyalty to his employer, the legitimate ruler.

The movie concludes with death begetting death. It is a happy death for me because the issue will rest both on the souls of those worthy to die and those who have forgiven each other before their final breaths. I find no better music than the Latin requiem chosen to be the background as the movie runs down all the acknowledgment behind its creation. I feel for Ophelia’s brother who cannot demand additional burial respects because the drowning of his sister, who though has lost her wits, is believed to have been willfully committed by her.

I like the skepticism which seems to be the revolving theme of the movie. Hamlet thinks either the apparition is hellish or real. A father thinks it is either for Hamlet’s love of his daughter or the death of his father that has caused his melancholia. Gertrude gives room for doubt if the murder of her king is real when she asks who Hamlet’s invisible friend is. The lovers both love and doubt if either of them is true to each other. And so on…Funny, I can relate to the command “go to a nunnery.”

I like the title of respect “my lord” one affords to a king, a parent, a senior or an honorable man as well as the respect and disrespect for the dead. I see the adoration of a sweet prince who remembers his jester as he holds her skull. Yet, I see the concealment of royal odor. Hamlet kills his girlfriend’s father, a chamberlain, but the entire kingdom does not know anything of it including the immediate family of the bereaved.

In his sporty duel with Laertes, he begs forgiveness before the swordfight. The prince is philosophical and sincere in his manner, not just at that moment he chooses to be than not to be. That is to be honest to his actions, its effect and his expression of remorse.

Then you have the premonition and the readiness for death as Hamlet says there is “special providence in the fall of the sparrow.” If not now, it will come. Death is not a new and surprising topic in Shakespeare’s works. I hope that I too will be ready and not be in a situation like old King Hamlet who has to suffer for sins committed and not given the time to atone for them because of his murder.

There is humor when Young Fortinbras, prince of Norway, sieges to reclaim a kingdom without effort “sorrowfully” claiming all that is to be his because the crown-bearer and bloodline to the throne are all extinguished.

If I have to rate the movie reducing my words of a thousand and six hundred which I find falling short to fully critique a three-hour movie in this paper; from one to five, I definitely give this a high five. The first time in history for me to do so and I am not taking it back.

March 24, 2009

The Monkey and the Sun

Filed under: Personal, Reviews — onlyme6000 @ 12:03 am

Myths are the ancient means of comprehending nature and the spiritual and the Philippines is not without them. This is to compare two which are taken from up north and down south by virtue of two authors’ pursuit of our heritage derived from the oral tradition, translated by interpreters, of the few ethnic peoples who have managed to keep themselves away from the hands of the colonizers. The Monkey Marries a Princess is a Bukidnon myth while Love of the Sun God is a myth from the province of Rizal. As a Visayan,* I will discuss them primarily in terms of love, deducing what may be some of the cultures of people representing Mindanao and Luzon.

The latter is of the Sun, a god who falls in love with Ishna. The former is the Monkey, armed with magic, who woos a lady whom no one has succeeded to win. The Monkey declares his love then wins his girl by affrighting that he will flood the place if his request for marriage is not accepted. If this myth is to be held true, this may be their tribal account of the great deluge which many cultures have asserted to have happened sometime in the distant past. The Sun god, comparably, is a voyeur who can neither verbalize his love nor take his girl on to his carriage as it will consume her life because after all he is the Sun, who shines at day and rides away with his chariot to let the moon relieve him at night. Here is a tribal animism of the sun, unknown to them as the center of a solar system; observable at day but not at night.

However negative the Monkey’s way of winning love enough for his father-in-law to not want to live with his daughter’s husband; the Monkey shows he loves his wife by bringing a wild boar and a hive full of honey “extraordinarily” to the powerless in a period of drought but quite ordinarily for someone who has magic. The shrinkage of things is not new if I am to look back on the book Alice in Wonderland. Their difference lies in each protagonist’s presence and absence of knowledge for why things just shrink. When the Monkey cultivates, shares his produce and unites all his in-laws in order to get the best harvest they can never achieve without the Monkey, I see a possible explanation for how the Bukidnons must have been taught through generations on how to sustain themselves in agriculture. Thanks to the ingenuity of the Monkey.

The Sun subdues his enormous admiration by planting sunbeams on the girl’s lips but gets her pregnant just the same. The girl cannot explain her unpleasant condition to her father who eventually disowns her as she knows no man. I see a cultural taboo on pregnancy outside marriage and at the same a belief in what can be a divine conception. Possibly, a breed of heroes is to come from these unions between a mortal and an immortal, like the Grecian way of thinking.

Then we have the Monkey again who has a spirit guide—source of his magic, who grants his wishes while the Sun, independently god himself, can do as he desires. Bukidnon then believes like the early the Filipinos before the coming of Spanish colonizers in deities and anitos as Rizal Province believes in the existence of gods like the Sun and other gods like whom Ishna, prayerful as the Christian Virgin Mary, offers her prayers to.

The ladies admired here are described to be with special qualities. Ishna waters the plants and is sung with songs by birds. In her absence, like Demeter goddess of agriculture is wearied in search for Persephone, everything else becomes dry. Lifeless. The woman of the Monkey is not named but described as a princess fair as Snow White who loves the Monkey because she screams of what seemed to be a murder seeing the Monkey’s skin afloat on the river. I see from Ishna a figure representing the caretaker of mother earth and from the Bukidnon princess, a wife’s loyalty to what or who has become by fate, her husband.

In the end the Monkey is revealed to be Bataay, a handsome young man who disguises himself out of fear that he will be loved only by his outward appearance and the honor that precedes him while the Sun looks down on his wife happily to see his child with a face radiant as the sun. Together, they take care of the earth.

Both stories reveal the desire of a story teller for happy endings. Although not all old and contemporary stories or movies end as lovely, the animated movie Little Mermaid for example which is an adaptation widely sold out with Ariel marrying the prince instead of losing her prince to another bride and dying to become the first sunrise and sunset.

For us who have forgotten our varied myths to embrace Christianity, Mary (not Ishna) is impregnated by the Holy Spirit (not by the Sun god) years after God created the world which man has to toil like Bataay with his own hands as punishment for the fall of Adam and Eve.

———————

*Magellan landed in the Visayas in 1521 which led to the colonialization of the Philippines by the Spaniards.

The short stories are found on:
pp 121-126 titled “The Monkey Marries a Princess” from the book Bukidnon Myths and Rituals c2000 by Carmen Unabia.
pp 177-179 titled “Love of the Sun God” from the book Myths and Legends of the Philippines c2007 by Marlene Aguilar. A heritage book by Jamayco, Inc. Quezon City.

December 5, 2008

Lingin as a Bisrock

Filed under: Reviews — onlyme6000 @ 10:32 pm

The early morn that I first heard of Lingin, the volume of my radio was minimized so the backup choral was not that audible. I was excited as the vocalist began to enumerate.

The song opens with him naming the parts of and things seen in his house–…our roof…cabinet…knife; my mind was saying “Go on” in anticipation.

What’s funny is that they are all described to be lingin—as repeatedly chanted by the back-up from the beginning (so I realized the next time I heard it).

And—he doesn’t have any other word to describe them with. That goes for the band’s chorus as well.

The third time he enumerates, he directs to his body parts.

Which is the odd one out? Definitely, it’s the word “itoy” (Watch the video below.) which is reworded as “periko” in radio airings. Unless this is in reference to his “bird,” then it lifts whatever makes it different from the class of objects found in the third verse.

Although it’s a terse and repetitive song with a simple melody, questions rolled through my head. If this speaks of the Circle of Life (kinabuhi), the song isn’t as long and as elaborate as Elton John’s. If this is about life being like a wheel as an addage—it is not implicit. Maybe it’s the natural curve in nature? Well, the first two sets are man-made. How about money represented by the shape of a coin?

Are your interpretations as roundabout as the circle too?

The artist knows best of the meaning behind this song.

Agressive Audio’s
Lingin

Intro;

Verse 1
ang among balay…. lingin
ang among atop……lingin
ang among bintana…lingin
ang among pultahan..lingin
ang among kwarto….lingin
ang among bong bong..lingin
ang among hagdanan
oooo..

Refrain:
pwerting lingina
ha..ha..ha..
ha..ha..ha..
ha..oo

Verse 2
ang among lamisa….lingin
ang among bangku….lingin
ang among aparador..lingin
ang among lantay….lingin
ang among kabinit…lingin
ang among takori….lingin
ang among kutsilyo
oooo.

Repeat refrain
Chorus:
ang among chorus
lingin lang gihapon
kay wala nay laing lyrics
lingin lang ghapon
kay ang atong kinabuhi lingin

Verse 3
ang akong ulo…..lingin
ang akong mata….lingin
ang akong ilong…lingin
ang akong baba….lingin
ang akong dughan..lingin
ang akong pusod…lingin
ang akong periko
oooo.

Repeat refrain
Repeat chorus
Instrumental
Repeat chorus

kay akong kinabuhi lingin
kitang tanan sa kalibutan lingin

September 3, 2008

Shutter

Filed under: Movie Review — onlyme6000 @ 4:16 am

Genre: Horror

Considered a little crazy for being into sleeping pills, Nagumi committed suicide haunting the surviving that wrecked her once while she was still living. The Jap’s intense emotions, like earthbound souls, are captured in rolls of films.  Shutter was spooky!

August 30, 2008

Psychic Living

Filed under: Book Reviews — onlyme6000 @ 9:46 pm

Genre: Advice and Self-Help

Creating a sacred space gave me the creeps. Probably, because it was my first journey to the universal with only a piece of book for a guide. Regularly doing its first few steps, I found myself murmuring the ritual in my sleep, I woke up terrified knowing that I have not memorized the entire process, I might especially miss the petition for safety. I remembered Staccy mentioning a cat she did not have, jumping out of a bag at home. As for me, it was though someone else was in the bathroom when I was really just by myself.

I love this modern book although I am not really up to now done with it. I guess I would never be until I tried to follow the steps conscientiously to its last page only to be dismayed in the middle part by someone who actually consulted the same psychic and claimed that the latter made a mistake in one of her readings and should not be trusted.

While others claimed to have reaped rewards, I am stuck with the question of whether I am ready to call for an Angel Party. So there, like her cover pose, it sits waiting for me to pick it up and read from where I left off. Don’t dare me. I know I’m chickenshit.

August 29, 2008

The Women’s Room

Filed under: Book Reviews — onlyme6000 @ 9:39 am
Tags:

Genre: Feminist

Other than the coincidence how “toilet booth” let me see our local kasilyas as a bifurcation–an answer to my homework, Marilyn French made a catchy start here; otherwise, I won’t have checked out The Women’s Room for two weeks. book image of The Women's Room The main one she named Mira, a straight A’s student, highly estimated by her teachers got married to Norm who’s graded C’s and found herself supporting him through medical school until she agreed to full-time domesticity when he earned his M.D. (half-way of a 686-page bk). Yes, she could’ve left Norm but she had to bear his children to be eventually suctioned into this “secret society” conceived of by French or else we wouldn’t have met French’s beautifully dressed “playdolls” that she paraded using reality as a backdrop. I was glad to once again meet so few of my friends or to have met people that I haven’t or perhaps will never meet if at all. I was glad to read of the idiosyncrasies of Mira’s friends as she rose up and down the economic strata. I just lost count remembering who to pair her fictional characters with who every now and then. Val, one of Mira’s friends, shared her stand on Harvard (at that time the story was set), gays, love (and because I just borrowed The Women’s Room I recorded myself (click here) reading an exerpt that I enjoyed with its “mockery and adoration” or communes, rape (near the denouement), men… The novel rippled back and forth in time. Marilyn shifted perspectives and at times conversed as to how her novel might have been written or what’s going to happen next then it’d unfold after several pages like a TV soap. She would then ask her reader if she’s a convincing misandrist. I swore at two or three of her dragging rationalizations and as if predicting the mind of her audience, she continued to recount. This one is definitely written by a woman with a gift of gab.

August 21, 2008

Childhood

Filed under: Book Reviews — onlyme6000 @ 5:42 pm

Writer: Andrei Alexis

Genre: Trinidad Blues

Personal Rating: starstarstarstarstar

Thomas was fair to his description of Henry; complementing his eccentricities with his gentleness. I admired the latter even with his refusal to see his mother’s defects, for not reproving Thomas despite his lies, for the lessons he taught him in his lab—-what if everything else including manure and cotton could be turned to gold? Like Thomas, I wondered why Kata chose to be with “abusive and loveless” men but on her deathbed sought for Henry’s presence, undeniably the one she loved after all– the same man Thomas would have wanted to be revealed as his father. I admired the writer’s peculiarities — with all the timetables, bullets, assumed dialogues, the footnotes, lines of poems quoted –every single thing which made perfect sense to me as I got to its finale, where it became clear as to where Thomas got his sense of humor, or if the rigorous training from his Trinidadian grandmother paid off. What a moving book this is from Andre’ Alexis! Alexis is a natural joker who is logical and sentimental at the same time. Every few pages or so, I reacted “hah!” Twice, I really laughed so hard. I didn’t expect to be crying but I did for the same people Thomas was bereft of. No wonder in 1999 this became a prize-winning national bestseller in Canada!

Novel reviewed by Lorelie

August 5, 2008

Pelikulakbay 08

Filed under: Movie Review — onlyme6000 @ 1:19 pm
1st of 5 Indie movies
Title:  Ang Sakristan
Directed by: Dave Cecilio
I especially liked the dialect they spoke which was different from what’s heard here in the heart of the city but the sound effect was disgusting. There was too much noise, I could hardly hear the characters speaking. Remember the scene at the wet market? The antagonist’s words, however, I was sure it came in very clearly to those who were from down South but the lines of some altar boys were eaten and difficult to grasp. The acting of the altar boys was OK assuming the creator randomly picked anyone he could get from that place. There was no need for the emcee to be apologetic or to tell us not to spare judgment on how they performed.

The sound of thunder went fine but the rain looked like coming from a hose sans the sprinkler. If not for the thunder, I thought somebody was just watering the plants. The antagonist stared at the camera at least twice to show that she must have seen something but then it would stop at her face. Twice there was no scene following what she exactly saw. There were insertions that needed to be cut while she was talking about meat and fish on Good Friday. The movie tried to be intelligent and to extend the thought of its audience. It was a thought-provoking depiction of the evil it could bring to your neighbor for not abiding by God’s 8th commandment.

2nd of 5 Indie movies

Title:  Baclaran

Directed by: Dave Cecilio

Baclaran seemed almost a monologue. Jossa’s voice drowned out all others’ dialogue that was often indistinct. I liked the quality of his voice though and the way he delivered his lines except that his face was transfixed. He carried the same expression throughout the entire movie. It was an unhappy but a deserved ending –his execution that fell on a Wednesday at 3PM–both being significant schedules to devotees of the church he turned as venue for his racket.

3rd of 5 Indie movies

Title:  Ang Pagbalik

Directed by: Publio Briones

Bambi was very poetic in Ang Pagbalik. Her deep voice was OK to me but to my seatmates, they were rather unsure if she was male or female. The person who told her what she had left from her mother’s death sounded very natural. Where she stood with an umbrella and looking across a body of water was somewhat picturesque but then often the moving pictures were dark. At times, you could only see her yellow umbrella moving horizontally as the rest had gray or black undertones. There’s some sense of humor attached to it. I was looking though for the morale behind her coming back for the priest she knew 25 years then.

4th of 5 Indie movies

Title:  Obsess

Directed by: Publio Briones

Of the five short films presented were to be judged by audience impact, Obsess would’ve won. The writer’s plot was believable but then the sickly mother was not. She did not look like one for she was very plump and I doubted that she would just lie there to be strangled. She might have just regained consciousness that’s why she stood knocking and following her daughter around. No, I was just kidding. She actually died or else, at the time her finger was cut off, that would have awakened her. On my way home, some students went talking about it and how scary it was. Obsess was aptly titled and I wouldn’t have titled it otherwise. Here, you’d see the obsession of the mother (assuming it was a spiritual haunting) or the daughter’s (of the crime she was about to commit and committed) and the cop’s obsession to materials things such as the ring.

5th of 5 Indie movies

Title:  Krisis

Directed by Dave Cecilio

Krisis worked along great at the onset. To compare all five, Krisis was best in cinematography and direction. The acting of the mother to the yaya to the students to driver was good. Even the lovemaking that wasn’t really it but only seemed so was not a put down. The boys, however, were too mestizo-looking for their parents unless they were adoptees. It ended abruptly as though it still had to be continued and the entire movie was meant to motivate to further development. It came to me as another trailer. I wanted to see more.

June 13, 2008

The Other Boleyn Girl

Filed under: Movie Review — onlyme6000 @ 11:05 am

Directed by: Justin Chadwick

Personal Rating: starstarstarstar

Genre: History

King Henry VIII of England divorced his brother’s widow to marry another woman who kept refusing his gifts and sister to his mistress who bore him a son. Excommunicated by the Catholic Church, he formed the Church of England. Adulterous as his new and cunning queen, he had her beheaded for adultery and incest. Darn double standards! =( Good choice of actors here, I must say, for this movie set in the 16th cent. Shown in the theatres, three months ago, I just saw this on DVD, three weeks ago. Truly, an intriguing and controversial piece of history or rumor. Thanks, Shanamits =D for inviting me over. Now, show me that other movie that continues the timeline and please not after a 12MN-8AM shift or else ZzzzZZzz (snore) ZzZzzZ. I freakin’ snore. =D

The Happening

Filed under: Movie Review — onlyme6000 @ 5:11 am

Directed by: M Night Shyamalan

Personal Rating: starstar

Genre: Science Fiction Drama
Out to watch a wholesome cartoon when the good name of M. Night Shyamalan (Director of The Sixth Sense) instantly changed our minds to see his latest The Happening, instead, or probably, because it’s Friday the 13th and are we to be shocked by what might possibly make one person after another commit suicide?

Whatever’s ‘happening’ in this R-13 movie and while a good number of people in it kill themselves, not providing Science with an exact explanation, the main stars are kept alive and unaffected by this pandemic.

Good for some but not to all moviegoers who watched this on its opening day June, Fri the 13th, of 2008 worldwide. Sure– different people, different tastes.

Great clouds but I just didn’t like the movie. It is inconsistently presented to redound to an idea repeated at least thrice: Not all are explicable. If this weren’t a treat from Ida (thanks ;]) who had to walk out to meet a housemate (Ouch, that wasn’t your skeleton…=D), I would’ve have asked for a refund. =(

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