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PEP REVIEW: Kinatay
by Fidel Antonio Medel posted on August 9, 2009  STATS: 306 Views | 7 Comments
A criminology student named Peping (Coco Martin, in photo) becomes a witness and an accomplice in the gruesome murder of a prostitute in the Brillante Mendoza film Kinatay. This Cannes award-winning film will soon have a screening in UP Diliman and Robinsons Movieworld. 

Brillante Mendoza accomplished what seasoned filmmakers and celebrated auteurs can only dream of. He competed in the most prestigious film festival in the world for two consecutive years: a feat not even the late Lino Brocka was able to achieve. The nine-member jury of the 2009 Cannes Film Festival honored the Filipino director with the Best Director award (French: Prix de la mise en scène) for his graphic and disconcerting depiction of moral decay in Kinatay. 


This film is a slice-of-life drama that chronicles a man's descent to the heart of evil. During the daytime sequences, Direk Dante explores the hustle and bustle of Manila's city life: noisy and overcrowded yet cheerful and hopeful.


We are introduced to the film's protagonist, Peping (Coco Martin). We see the events transpire before him. He drops off his seven month old baby and ties the knot with his young fiancée (Mercedes Cabral). The next morning, he attends class in a police academy. Despite being poor and the tough times ahead, a bright future smiles on this young man. There is hope...or so it seems. 


As darkness creeps in, Direk Dante drops the curtains to reveal a portrait of the teeming and frenetic slums. We see Peping help his acquaintance, Abyong (Jhong Hilario,) in collecting what seems like ‘kotong' money from the street vendors of Quiapo. He is then invited to join an unnamed operation that promises a higher pay. Together with a bunch of hooligans, they pick up an aging prostitute named Madonna (Maria Isabel Lopez). She is gagged and pummeled to the floor by Sarge (John Regala) the moment she boarded the van. Apparently, Madonna owes Vic (Julio Diaz) a huge sum of money. Sarge and Vic are both policemen who get their hands dirty in the drug trade. 


What follows is a prolonged nighttime drive. Inside the cramped van, Peping watches in awe as the helpless hooker gets beaten to a pulp. Since the van sequences are shot in real time, we start to feel discomfort and anxiety as we bear witness to such gruesome violence. We hear Madonna's muffled cries slowly drowning in the soundscape of the busy city. 


And then we reach the destination, a secluded safe house in Bulacan. Madonna is taken to the basement of the house where she is beaten, humiliated, raped, slain, and eventually hacked to pieces using blunt kitchen tools. Direk Dante's strategic interplay of darkness and flickers of light amplifies the horror. We hear Madonna wailing and pleading for her life, followed by the sound of body parts cracking. Although the merciless deeds of the cold-blooded murderers are shrouded in the shadow, we are left to imagine scenarios that are far more terrifying. We recoil at the harrowing denunciation of sadism. We want to get out but like Peping, we are trapped. 


But is Peping really trapped? Despite his unwillingness to take an active part in the crime, he could have run away. He could have reach the gun in his back pocket and kill everyone. But why would he do that? Madonna is a washed-up drug addict and prostitute. Is she worth the trouble?


Kinatay
treads the path of grayscale morality. And so, Direk Dante challenges our conscience and asks difficult questions. If you were Peping, what could you have done? At a time when horrendous crimes are staples in the news, the corruption of people's mores is like a plague that offers a future of no redemption. 


Kinatay
is a difficult film to watch not only because of the despicable subject matter but also because of the torturous signature style of Direk Dante: t unsteady camerawork, the foreboding darkness, and the occasional lull. But this film is not just a film, but an experience in itself. He invites us to walk in his character's shoes, face the horror, and make some incredibly tough choices. That makes Kinatay exceptional. It is an effective thriller that not only portrays societal realities, but imparts an unforgettable experience that will haunt you like a nightmare you can't wake up from.


Brillante Mendoza's film has been rated R18, without cuts, by the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board. 


Kinatay will soon have a screening in the University of the Philippines Film Institute in Diliman, Quezon City and Robinsons Movieworld.  

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7 Comments

  • 12dec2007

    08/29/2009 | 10:00 PM
    galing talaga nya super...good luck more movies to come...
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  • careermuna

    08/22/2009 | 01:36 AM
    nice movie,..ganda!!ok tlagang wo cut kase yun nag saysay ng movie na ito,...sana more director like brilliante,..yung SERBIS nya kase pure exploitation o libog lang,...mas ok ito..sana gumawa sya ng commercialmovies pero hindi horror olovestorys ha,.heheyung mala hollywood...
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  • aling_pacing

    08/19/2009 | 01:46 PM
    LOVED it! It was very edgy, and realistic...I often forgot I was watching feature film, bec. it felt like I was watching a crime reality show, i.e. quot;Cops.quot; It was that raw and true to life. It's not for every taste, but it makes a wonderful statement about some sectors of our law enforcement. Love it or hate it, you will never forget it...however, I LOVED IT, LOVED IT, LOVED IT!!! Can't wait to see his next films. : Brillante Mendoza forever! :
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  • tylersebastian

    08/12/2009 | 10:40 PM
    Is this piece a review or is it a press release? We were taught in Ateneo how to write a film criticism, this one is certainly far from it.

    Requesting the editors of pep to classify correctly a release vis-a-vis a movie review.

    Thanks
    Reply |  0 Replies
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  • pnoiserule

    08/11/2009 | 11:41 PM
    Mabuti na lang umatras ang MTRCB sa PAGKATAY ng pelikulang KINATAY. Nakakahiya nga naman na ang pelikulang hinangaan at nanalo sa Pranses, at ipinapalabas sa iba pang bansa ay hindi maaaring maipalabas sa sarili nitong bansa dahil sa makikitid na utak ng mga sensura nito.

    Sa pag-atras ng MTRCB, naipakita lamang na PEKE talaga ang pahiwatig na dalisay nilang mandato. Na ang inaalagaang moralidad ng lipunan kuno ay multong binuhay lamang nila sa nagbabanal-banalan nilang mga utak. At maaari palang PAGKATIWALAAN ang mga tao, lalo na ang mga nasa sapat na gulang NA PANOORIN ANG NAIS NILANG PANOORIN nang walang sagka o sensura.

    Sana magtagumpay ang panukalang batas na gagawing Classification Board na lang ang MTRCB at makalaya tayo sa makalumang kweba ng sensura. Panahon na.
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  • tiltym

    08/11/2009 | 04:51 PM
    sya mapanood nga ng mahusguhan kong desrving nga tayong manalo ng best director sa cannes.
    Reply |  0 Replies
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  • chris159dude

    08/10/2009 | 11:59 AM
    taba ni coco dito...
    Reply |  0 Replies
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