Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Little Miss Sunshine

Rating:★★★★
Category:Movies
Genre: Comedy
To think that a film like this can ever come out of American cinema defies logic. With 20 wins under its belt and nominated for 4 Oscars including Best Picture, my friend from the Netherlands actually saw this film two months ago in Amsterdam and was immediately captivated by its twisted but funny Americana family.

(wiki)Little Miss Sunshine by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, is the story of the Hoovers, a fictional dysfunctional family from Albuquerque, New Mexico. The characters are introduced in the opening sequences; Sheryl Hoover (Toni Collette), a stressed and over-worked mother of two, picks up her brother Frank (Steve Carell- Forty Year Old Virgin) at a hospital after the depressed, gay Proust scholar has recovered from a failed suicide attempt. Richard Hoover (Greg Kinnear- As Good as it Gets) is a manic go-getter striving to sell his motivational nine-step technique to becoming a winner. Dwayne (Paul Dano), Sheryl's son, is an angst-ridden, avowedly mute, Nietzsche-reading teenager who has dedicated his life to joining the Air Force Academy in order to become a test pilot. Richard's father, Edwin (Alan Arkin), recently evicted from a retirement home for snorting heroin, is shown to have a strong bond with his seven-year-old granddaughter Olive (Abigail Breslin), and coaches her to perform in a child beauty pageant.

The tensions unravel as the family gets into their beaten yellow VW and go on a road trip to the Little Miss Sunshine pageant in Redondo Beach, California. But as fate would throw almost every scathing disappointments their way, the family trudged on stubbornly , and come on, the tenacity can be totally heartwarming.

Being a self-confessed fan of dysfunctional families myself (I am a huge Simpson, Family Guy and American Dad fan), the story of 'Sunshine' is an endearing one as it digs deep into the universal psyche of families in all its disturbing quirkiness. I wouldnt be totally surprised if 'Sunshine' can pull the rug under other Best Picture contenders- but of course the Oscars have not been totally known to give proper credit where credit is due but that's another story- and romp away with the overrated statuette.

You gotta love this movie not for the big stars, but for its big heart that never begs.

El Metodo

Rating:★★★★
Category:Movies
Genre: Foreign
I think Hollywood and our local cinema can learn a thing or two about this sharp little Spanish film by Marcelo Piñeyro, a screen adaptation of Jodi Galceran's El Metodo Gronholm.

When seven candidates gather in a conference room 35 stories up to compete for an executive position while the hordes of anti-globalization protesters gather in the streets of Madrid to protest the IMF-WB meeting, expect to see sparks of cinema brilliance fly.

The story revolves around the seven candidates headlined by some of Spain's best actors (Eduardo Noriega (Tesis, Abre Los Ojos) as Carlos provides a very refreshing performance, likewise Carmelo Gomez- Goya Best Supporting Actor, Eduard Fernandez, Pablo Echarri, Najwa Nimri lends stellar performances) who have to be in a series of unconventional employment tests called the Gronholm Method which hints in some in say "whodunit" fashion slash Big Brother style. To add to the suspense, a company mole was planted among the 7 candidates and they have to find who that person was while eliminating each other one by one.

The fact that the dialogue was entirely Spanish (not to count the brief exchanges in French and English at the latter part), most of the scenes restricted at the conference room with some brief moments at the executive washroom, the film was entirely engaging and there never was a dull moment. The lines were delivered with crisp, clear and naturalness that it was almost delicious to listen to with its pointed observations toward social criticism and human nature was thought-provoking.

The cinematography was clean without being too Hollywoodish - reminds me of Abre Los Ojos, the directing was excellent. Winner of 2 Goyas.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Jews and Judaism in the Philippines

As of 2005, the population of Jews in the Philippines stands at the very most 500 people. Other estimates range between 100 and 500 people (0.000001% and 0.000005% of the country's total population). Manila boasts the largest Jewish community, which consists of roughly 40 families. There are, of course, other Jews elsewhere in the country, but these are obviously fewer and almost all transients, either diplomats or business envoys. Their existence is almost totally unknown in mainstream society. There are a few Israelis in Manila recruiting caregivers for Israel and a few other executives.


History


Spanish era: Sephardim and the Inquisition



The history of the Philippines' first Jewish presence spans back to the 16th century, to a few individuals during the Spanish colonial era. It was then that the earliest Jews in the Philippines are historically documented, when two Sephardic brothers (Jews of Spanish origin), Jorge and Domingo Rodríguez, are recorded as having reached Manila in the 1590s. By 1593, both were tried and convicted as Judaizantes (practicing Jews) at an auto de fe at the Mexico City office of the Spanish Inquisition. Known as Marranos or nuevos cristianos ("New Christians"; newly converted to Christianity), the two brothers had accompanied the Spanish conquistadors who colonised the Philippines. Eight other marranos in the Philippines were subsequently tried and convicted.


The first permanent settlement of Jews in the Philippines during the Spanish colonial years began in 1870 with the arrival of three Levy brothers from Alsace-Lorraine, who were escaping the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War. As successful entrepreneurs, the businesses of the three brother grew, and with the opening of the Suez Canal in March 1869 it provided a more direct trading route between Europe and the Philippines, attracting other Jews to Manila. By the end of the Spanish period, the Levy brothers had been joined by Egyptian Jews (Mizrahim), and Sephardim from Turkey and Syria, creating a community of about fifty individuals.


American era



It was not until the Spanish-American War at the end of the 19th century, when the United States took control of the islands from Spain, that the Jewish community grew more than a few individuals. By 1918, twenty years after the Americans took over the Philippines, the Manila Jewish community totalled about 150 people, including a number of Russian Jews. By 1936, the Jewish community in the Philippines had a total population of about 500 persons.


A number of Jews were among the Thomasites, a group of American educators who volunteered to teach and set up institutions around the country. A number of American Jews, chose to settle. This included engineers, business men, architects, physicians and others. The founder of the Makati Stock Exchange is an American Jew.


Pre and Post World War II and Exodus to the US



The largest influx of Jews in Philippine history occurred in the years leading up to World War II. In the late 1930s, the Jewish American cigar manufacturer Alex Frieder – an expatriate from Cincinnati resident in the Philippines – along with his three brothers Philip, Morris and Herbert, organised the Jewish Refugee Committee after seeing Jewish refugees stranded at Philippine ports after having escaped on ships from escalating persecution in Europe. They helped 1,200 mostly German and Austrian Jewish refugees to obtain passports and visas to enter the Philippines. At first, the Frieder's intended to help some 10,000 people make their way to the islands, but this was hampered by Japanese interventions. The Frieder brothers achieved the granting of permits of entry with the help of Alex's close friends, the then President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, Manuel L. Quezon, and Commissioner of the Philippines, Paul V. McNutt.


Manuel Quezon, issued visas for Jews to travel to the Philippines, established a housing project for them in Marikina, and planned a farm settlement in Mindanao to accommodate 35,000 Jewish refugees.


For the refugees that did manage to settle in the Philippines, the committee organised finding employment and new homes for them in Manila. Though relatively modest in numbers, the newly arrived refugees overwhelmed the tiny Jewish community, and multiplied its numbers overnight.


At their height, Jews resident in the Philippines at one stage numbered over 1,000.† The period in which most of these Jews arrived was under president Manuel L. Quezon, when he allowed them entry as persecution in Europe increased, which eventually led to the Holocaust.


Except for the first few intrepid Sephardi individuals who made their way to the archipelago during the colonial era, the entire population of Jews ever present in the Philippines were of Northern and Eastern European origin (Ashkenazim). Eventually, all but a few found there way to other destinations, mainly the United States.


Communal life


The original established community of the 1870s had largely been secular and decentralised, but with the rise of anti-Semitism in Europe, and the following tide of Jewish refugees arriving to the Philippines – relative to the community's population numbers in Manila – sparked a renewed Jewish consciousness.


The one and only synagogue in the country – the second ever built in the Philippines – is Manila's Beth Yaakov Synagogue, located at Taft and Quirino Avenues. It was built in the 1980s. The only other synagogue that existed prior to the erection of Beth Yaakov Synagogue was Temple Emil, built in the 1920s. Unfortunately, Temple Emil was destroyed by the Japanese during World War II, a time when the Jewish community of Manila saw itself under attack, and many were interned in Japanese detention camps. Interestingly, at first German Jews in the Philippines were not detained, as the Japanese regarded them nationals of their ally, Germany. However, the Nazis were able to contact the Japanese and influence them. The German Jews were segregated from other non-Jewish Germans and grouped together with the other prisoners.


(from wiki)

Sunday, January 7, 2007

A Long Way Down

Rating:★★★
Category:Books
Genre: Literature & Fiction
Author:Nick Hornby
(Synopsis) Disgraced TV presenter Martin Sharp wanted to jump off the top of a tower block, because he pissed his life away. He plans to end it all on New Year's Eve. Because first single-mum Maureen, then Jess and lastly American rock-god JJ, turn up and crash Martin's private party. They've stolen his idea, but brought their own reasons.

We chanced upon this Nick Hornby (Fever Pitch, High Fidelity- yes it's Hornby, not Horny as some of my wise ass friends would chime in everytime I tell them about it) book as me and a friend was rummaging through a bookstore looking for a perfect book for a friend suffering from a pseudo-breakup of sorts. And a story about a group of suicidal people couldn't be any more hilariously and sardonically apropos.

The story weaves through the four lives that were accidentally intertwined while queueing at Topper's House, a tower block notorious for people committing suicides. After a few heated words and cold slices of pizza, they became kindred spirits. Martin Sharp was convicted and jailed for unknowingly sleeping with a minor, estranged from his wife and children and working for an almost nonexistent cable channel. Maureen has a vegetable of a son who couldnt even speak. Jess suffering from a recent breakup, bad parenting and still living under the shadows of her missing and presumed dead older sister. And JJ, reeling from being recently dumped,and a band split up, scared of being doomed to flipping burgers the rest of his life.

Jess says, 'That's what the four of us had done - crossed a line. I don't mean we'd done anything bad. I just mean that something had happened to us which separated us from lots of other people. We had nothing in common apart from where we'd ended up, on that square of concrete high up in the air, and that was the biggest thing you could possibly have in common with anyone.'

As we follow through their futile attempts at rekindling their old thirst for life by doing something for each other (looking and confronting Jess' ex-boyfriend, meeting up with Martin's ex-wife, taking Maureen off to a vacation), the story although how fascinating it can be, can be long-winded and at one point I would have pushed the characters off the ledge myself.

The story involves the question not of death and dying but of whether it is even moral to continue living when all has lost the will to live. Matty's character (the paralyzed son of Maureen's) makes us want to answer that question. Not being able to speak, and paralyzed his whole life, the four characters felt never more alive than he is, and I must say, more dead than he could ever be. Equipped with witty, patently British humour makes for the dragging and the sometimes farcical part of the book.

I finally finished this book a few days before the New Year. For all it's worth, I'd give Hornby's work 3 stars. At some point it made me chuckle.

Asia Pacific Regional Meeting 2007

Start:     Mar 12, '07 08:00a
End:     Mar 16, '07
Location:     Manila, The Philippines
Meeting of Presidents and CEOs and other top-level bank officials in the AP Region of World Savings Bank, Institute- member-banks.

2007 Boracay Trip

Start:     Feb 22, '07 11:00p
End:     Feb 25, '07
Location:     Lorenzo Grand Villas, Hey Jude, Boracay Island
After we invaded the shores of Boracay last quarter, we are back meaner than ever.

Alain hits Manila!

Start:     Feb 5, '07 11:00p
End:     Feb 15, '07
Arrival of my favorite Belgian!

Matt's Birthday Lunch

Start:     Feb 18, '07 11:00a
Location:     Century Park Sheraton
Lunch with "Inventor/Tycoon" Matthew

Space Ibiza

Start:     Jan 19, '07 11:00p
Location:     World Trade Center
First dance party of the year, from the guys who brought you Tiesto (Stephen Ku and co.)

Donnelly's Birthday Party

Start:     Jan 12, '07 11:00p
End:     Jan 13, '07
Location:     Ayala Alabang
Birthday of our favorite Costa Rican papi!

Friday, January 5, 2007

Marie Antoinette

Rating:★★
Category:Movies
Genre: Drama
After failing twice to watch the film (we were late for the screening the first time and by the second time, it was temporarily taken off the cinemas to give way to 007 Casino Royale), last hollidays in the deep south, finally, I was able to watch Sofia Coppola's retelling of one of the controversial monarchs in world history.

And I should have listened to fate telling me the first 2 attempts of watching the film: the entire film was dreadfully insipid, and a gross deservice to the grandeur and the historical significance of the set (filmed inside the Versailles) and the pretty, pretty period costumes. The indecipherable whispering was unnerving, annoying to say the least and ultimately forgettable. I mean come on Ms. Coppola, there must be something lost in the translation here (pardon the pun). On what supposed to be the most important (and dramatic) figures of French history, the whole film was watered down to an exercise of boredom that I could have wished Marie Antoinette and her coterie were beheaded in the first few minutes of the film and I would have stood up and left. An attempt to approximate the cinematography of similar modern interpretations like Baz Luhrmann's Romeo and Juliet was offset by the fact that there was no story to tell or should I say there was no story told in the first place.

Dunst delivered a really weird performance as the young Austrian princess married off to the French Crown Prince. "Let them eat cake" was supposed to be one of the most infamous lines ever uttered but the star of Legally Blond (Okay, I stand corrected, it was Reese Witherspoon, but blond girls look alike so sue me..hehe.. let me rephrase this part- replace Legally Blond with the Mary Jane character from Spider Man. Hehehehe... thanks Jane for the correction) just mouthed them off almost flatly. Makes you wonder whether Dunst ever learned anything from years of acting.

With films like this, I may just have to chuck off my Valiums, this is the ultimate sedation baby! 2 Stars- One for Versailles and another for the costumes.