By Noel Vera

MOVIE REVIEW
Free Range
Directed by Dennis Marasigan

DENNIS MARASIGAN鈥橲 Free Range is what might be called an advocacy film, or a film made with a specific agenda or cause in mind — in this case a production initiated and partially funded by the ToFarm Film Festival to showcase the Filipino farmer (the films had a brief run in Manila before swinging through Pampanga, Cabanatuan, Cebu, to end in Davao).

I haven鈥檛 seen the festival winner, Zig Dulay鈥檚 Paglipay (Crossing), about Aeta farmers practicing kaingin (slash-and-burn) agriculture, but from the details I would imagine that production should benefit from its exotic culture and dramatic visual imagery (the farmers burn brush and forest to make room and provide fertilizer for their crops).

Filmmaker/writer/actor Dennis Marasigan鈥檚 own project tackles a far more quotidian and in many ways more difficult-to-visualize subject: chicken farming. The raising of poultry for meat and eggs. Not quite as sexy as the cliched image of a fierce native in loincloth, setting torch to a stretch of grassland — no, here we鈥檙e dealing with layer breeds, coop structures, vitamin supplements. Not quite promising material for a dramatic fiction feature.

Marasigan sails into the challenge: he opens with an equally unlikely protagonist, Chito (Paolo O鈥橦ara) a schlubby unassuming young man who acts as manager-secretary to his parents Terry and Louie (the more regal-looking Madeline Nicholas and Leo Rialp), owners of their Palawan family resort — and immediately you sense tension. Chito鈥檚 eyes are perpetually downcast and constantly throwing sidelong glances; Terry and Louie look tired, bored, faintly irritated. At one point Marasigan shoots the parents head-on, sitting at their respective desks, and from the way they鈥檙e lit and lensed they seem to be established in their respective thrones, lost in their own private realms; Chito on the other hand is shot and lit to look like a humble supplicant begging for audience.

image

Mother and father inquire about the resort鈥檚 status; Terry asks about Chito鈥檚 wife Alma in Manila to which Chito responds, and something about their exchange suggests there鈥檚 tension in Chito鈥檚 marriage. Later we see Chito calling Alma long-distance and Marasigan teases us a little, showing us first an adorably handsome boy (five or six is my guess) calling to his mother, who鈥檚 in the bathroom (we glimpse the back of her head through a door slightly ajar). When she finally comes to the phone we think: uh oh. She鈥檚 played by the drop-dead gorgeous Jackie Rice, and from the look on her unenthusiastic face she鈥檚 too much woman for Chito.

The setup is ready for a melodrama — but this is a film about chicken farming, and somehow the topic keeps fluttering in like unwelcome fowl; a resort guest named Toby (Michael de Mesa) visits Palawan to prospect sites for free-range farms, thinks a portion of Chito鈥檚 own land would be perfect; Chito is intrigued — but what about his family鈥檚 resort? What about his clearly unsatisfied too-hot-to-handle wife?

As Chito, Paolo O鈥橦ara is a bit like the subject matter itself — I mean, chicken farming? O鈥橦ara at first glance does not appear to be hero material, much less lead for a feature film. Yet (like the chickens) he grows on you; he sinks his talons in and smiles his wide smile (revealing the gap where a tooth should be back there) and wins you over, maybe even (bit of a plot reveal here) persuade you that maybe his wife didn鈥檛 marry him for his money after all, but for his boyish charm, his idealism, his basic unalloyed decency.

The other characters show the same ability: they come across initially as types (the forbidding father, the too-hot mama) but as you come to know them they surprise you with nuances, little character details that show that maybe this marriage and this family in general might have enough strength and connective tissue to see them through whatever crisis is in store.

I鈥檓 guessing Marasigan鈥檚 model for the film is Manuel Silos鈥檚 1959 classic Biyaya ng Lupa (Blessings of the Land), about lanzones farmers struggling to raise crops against intimidating odds. Silos鈥檚 film is a masterpiece, confident in its pacing, majestic in its visual splendor; if Jean Renoir decided to do an agricultural drama in Southeast Asia the results might not be far different, though Silos may also have been influenced by Alexander Dozhenko鈥檚 Earth in his climactic harvest sequence (Dozhenko鈥檚 voluptuous taut-skinned pears resurrected as Silos鈥 overflowing baskets of fruit).

Not saying the resulting chicken eggs are as splendid-looking as Silos鈥檚 lanzones or Dozhenko鈥檚 pears; if I have a real complaint it鈥檚 that Marasigan doesn鈥檛 invest enough time or effort into showing us the difference between free range and standard-issue chicken and eggs — that growing free range chickens involve less environmental impact (we鈥檙e told this, we don鈥檛 see it in, say, a single panning shot), that the meat and eggs of said chickens is tastier, fresher, healthier overall. A visiting chef (or say if Chito were an amateur cook) doing classic tinola, or chicken adobo, or a spectacular pinikpikan might go a long way to winning converts. Even the simple act of frying an egg in butter Fernand Point-style might help.

Not saying Marasigan is equal to Renoir or Dozhenko either — he鈥檚 a veteran stage actor and director, a talented relatively new filmmaker with a small but promising filmography (Sa North Diversion Road, Anatomiya ng Korupsyon); I do think the DNA connecting to their works is there. The leisurely pacing, the patient accumulation of detail building character and milieu, the belief — both novelistic and agricultural — that if one can only survive, if one can only keep things together somehow till the end of the crisis or season or year, one has a fighting chance of succeeding, someday. Call it willful optimism, call it long-distance determination, call it steadfastness in the face of adversity — it鈥檚 the kind of human-sized understated everyday heroism we might more readily call the Filipino spirit, improbably but persuasively incarnated in a small-budget advocacy film. Not a bad achievement, considering.

(The film will show at SM Davao from Oct. 12 to 18, as part of the ToFarm Film Festival.)