Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Cinema One Originals 2013 finalists revealed

Happening in November, the 15 finalists for the Cinema One Originals Festival of 2013 has been revealed. The films fall under two categories - Cinema One Plus with P2-million production budget, and Cinema One Currents with P1-million budget.

Cinema One Originals 2013

There are five films under Cinema One Plus. They are:

1. Kabisera by director Borgy Torre - tells the action-packed story of one man’s transformation from a naïve innocent citizen to a ruthless father and friend, eventually leading him into the bottomless pit of the drug trade.

2. Blue Bustamante by director Miko Livelo - a family drama-comedy that focuses on the story of an OFW who suddenly becomes jobless in Japan. A friend introduces him to a Sentai director who convinces him to be a double for Blue Force, a superhero character in an upcoming Japanese show.

3. Sitio by director Mes de Guzman - a psychological drama about a family who moves from the city to the province in search of a simpler life, only to find more problems and setbacks instead.

4. Alamat Ni China Doll by director Adolf Alix, Jr. - tells the dramatic story of a woman named Helen who lives with her grandmother in an idyllic island down south. At the age of 25, she is hopeful about finally graduating from high school and starting a new life. However, an article entitled “China Doll” reveals details about a controversy and turns things around for Helen. Screenplay is by award-winning director Lav Diaz.

5. Woman Of The Ruins by director Keith Sicat - a mystery drama in which on a storm-ravaged island, a person assumed dead reappears and ignites a frenzy of reactions, ranging from ecstatic religious fervor to fear.

The ten films under Cinema One Currents:

1. Angustia by director Kristian Cordero, is set in the 19th century Bicolandia where a Spanish friar falls for a woman of indigenous origins.

2. Ang Pagbabalat Ng Ahas by director Timmy Harn delves into a lower middle-class family who moves to an upper middle-class village where a mad scientist is keeping a snake-man captive.

3. Islands by director Whammy Alcarazen, an experimental/science-fiction, is about a spacecraft that lands through the geographies of a fictional film entitled “Islands,” and the reality in which it is that is depicted as as a movie.

4. Bukas Na Lang Sapagkat Gabi Na by director Jet Leyco is a four-part narrative of three related occurrences sparked by an accident that happens to a Filipino-Spanish priest.

5. Iskalawags by director Keith Deligero, a comedy, is an aching coming-of-age tale of friendship and youth set in a small town in Cebu.

6. Suffocating Eternity Of An Imagined Purgatory by director Joseph Laban is a horror story about missing kids in Marinduque who are believed to have been kidnapped by spirits of the sea.

7. Philippino Story by director Benjamin Garcia is a cautionary tale that reveals the dangers and drama behind male prostitution.

8. Shift by Siege Ledesma tells the story of an idealistic, tomboyish, call center slacker who is mentored by a pragmatic, gay senior agent. Their interaction develops into an unconventional relationship that eventually challenges their most personal convinctions.

9. Bendor by director Ralston Jover is set in Manila’s Quiapo Church 40 days before the annual Good Friday procession of the miraculous 400-year-old Black Nazarene statue. An early morning mass is disrupted when a candle vendor finds a blood-soaked box containing a dead fetus.

10. Riddles Of My Homecoming by Davao-based director Arnel Mardoquio presents an insight into the lives of Lumads and Moros of Mindanao as it depicts the belief that when a person dies, his soul returns to his homeland.

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