by Tobiasz Dunin
“Elegy to the Visitor from the Revolution” is a drama written and directed by Lav Diaz. At first, it was supposed to be a one-minute segment of a video compilation honoring the late film critics Alexis Tioseco and Nika Bohinc. However, Diaz's creation grew beyond its initial intent, and became a full-length feature. The title alludes to the 1896 Philippine Revolution, a conflict where Filipino revolutionaries fought against Spanish colonial authorities, aiming to gain independence.
The plot is quite vague and tells a story about a woman (Hazel Orencio) from the late 19th century that travels to contemporary Philippines and witnesses intertwined narratives – about a sex worker, a musician, and a gang of lawbreakers. These segments are further divided into disparate plot lines – a sex worker (Sigrid Bernardo) awaits a client, a musician (Diaz) plays guitar by himself, and three criminals are figuring out a way to make some money.
“Elegy to the Visitor from the Revolution” is a drama written and directed by Lav Diaz. At first, it was supposed to be a one-minute segment of a video compilation honoring the late film critics Alexis Tioseco and Nika Bohinc. However, Diaz's creation grew beyond its initial intent, and became a full-length feature. The title alludes to the 1896 Philippine Revolution, a conflict where Filipino revolutionaries fought against Spanish colonial authorities, aiming to gain independence.
The plot is quite vague and tells a story about a woman (Hazel Orencio) from the late 19th century that travels to contemporary Philippines and witnesses intertwined narratives – about a sex worker, a musician, and a gang of lawbreakers. These segments are further divided into disparate plot lines – a sex worker (Sigrid Bernardo) awaits a client, a musician (Diaz) plays guitar by himself, and three criminals are figuring out a way to make some money.
- 12/23/2023
- by Guest Writer
- AsianMoviePulse
Get in touch to send in cinephile news and discoveries. For daily updates follow us @NotebookMUBI.NEWSMichael Mann on the set of HeatMichael Mann has stated that he wishes to continue the Heat saga with a big-screen sequel, and maybe even a television series. Mann has also "two-thirds" of a novel that is both a prequel and sequel to the iconic film. At the Venice Film Festival, Brian De Palma discussed his forthcoming thriller that uses the "Harvey Weinstein era" as a "historical backdrop." The current title for the project is Predator. One last potential movie we'd like to see: the ever-absent Richard Kelly, director of Donnie Darko, is rumored to be entering production on a biopic about The Twilight Zone creator Rob Serling.Recommended VIEWINGRoy Andersson's dreamy About Endlessness depicts "a kaleidoscope of all that is eternally human" in a string of interconnected lives. The official trailer for Ema,...
- 9/14/2019
- MUBI
Close-Up is a column that spotlights films now playing on Mubi. Lav Diaz's An Investigation on the Night That Won't Forget (2012) is showing February 8 - March 10, 2017 in the retrospective It's About Time: The Cinema of Lav Diaz.The night in question in Lav Diaz’s An Investigation on the Night That Won’t Forget is September 1, 2009. The night that two film critics, Alexis Tioseco and Nika Bohinc, were murdered in their home in Quezon City, Philippines. An Investigation on the Night That Won’t Forget opens with a title card: “Part 1. Cradle of Memory.” The next image is a black and white shot of Erwin Romulo, Alexis’ close friend and editor. The doorway of his office frames him on either side as he sits in a chair facing the camera, a desk to his left, a bookshelf behind him. For the next 55 minutes the camera will not move and...
- 2/9/2017
- MUBI
Mubi is proud to present the first-ever online retrospective of renowned Filipino auteur Lav Diaz. To give audiences the proper time to spend immersed in Diaz’s cinema, Mubi will debut one film each month during the retrospective.Illustration by Leah BravoFilmmaker Lavrente Indico Diaz, named after Soviet statesman Lavrentiy Beria (1899-1953), was born on December 30th 1958 in the municipality of Datu Paglas, province of Maguindanao, Mindanao Island, Southern Philippines. The son of a fervently Catholic woman from the Visayas (Central Philippines) and a Socialist intellectual from Ilocos (Northern Philippines) who, firmly believing that education is the key to improve Man's condition, devoted their lives to schooling peasants in the poorest, remotest Maguindanao villages, Diaz has always had an utilitarian conception of culture and, by extension, of all forms of artistic expression. To Diaz, art should not be an end to itself, a purely formalist exercise, but—to paraphrase a...
- 10/8/2016
- MUBI
"I wish Francis 'Oggs' Cruz, Richard Bolisay, and Dodo Dayao would get space in the broadsheets, because they're far more interesting than anyone writing there regularly."--Alexis Tioseco, "Wishful Thinking for Philippine Cinema"
According to Dodo Dayao's MySpace page, he is 102 years old and chasing pavements. He further describes himself as "writer, filmmaker, infrequent painter, random komikero [i.e., comic book enthusiast], heartthrob in a past life, monkey gone to heaven." We should all be so prolific. Not only does he administer two film sites--Is It Safe? and Piling Piling Pelikula--but, he's a team contributor to Geeks United, Korean Bug and Unspoken Cinema.
In similar collaborative spirit, his oil paintings have been featured in group exhibitions at various galleries in the Philippines (examples can be seen at Quezon City's West Gallery website as part of three group shows: "12x9", "Them!" and "2010: The Year We Make Contact"). He's also collaborated with Khavn dela Cruz...
According to Dodo Dayao's MySpace page, he is 102 years old and chasing pavements. He further describes himself as "writer, filmmaker, infrequent painter, random komikero [i.e., comic book enthusiast], heartthrob in a past life, monkey gone to heaven." We should all be so prolific. Not only does he administer two film sites--Is It Safe? and Piling Piling Pelikula--but, he's a team contributor to Geeks United, Korean Bug and Unspoken Cinema.
In similar collaborative spirit, his oil paintings have been featured in group exhibitions at various galleries in the Philippines (examples can be seen at Quezon City's West Gallery website as part of three group shows: "12x9", "Them!" and "2010: The Year We Make Contact"). He's also collaborated with Khavn dela Cruz...
- 3/15/2010
- Screen Anarchy
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