Movie Review
Leonor Will Never Die
Written and Directed by Martika Ramirez Escobar
Leonor (Sheila Francisco) is a retired Filipina action filmmaker who nurses a script she dreams of directing someday; meantime she receives a disconnection notice from the power company and her eldest Rudie (Bong Cabrera) schemes to work overseas but can鈥檛 bring himself to tell his mother. Humble junkyard welder Ronwaldo (Rocky Salumbides) watches in horror as his younger brother is falsely accused of being a drug pusher and gunned down; Leonor is struck down by a stray television set (don鈥檛 ask), suddenly finds herself inside Ronwaldo鈥檚 increasingly hazardous storyline; meantime Rudie, staying by his unconscious mother鈥檚 side, decides to make a movie of his mother鈥檚 unfinished script…
If you鈥檙e thinking Filipino version of Everything, Everywhere, All at Once, you鈥檙e not too far off, only Martika Ramirez Escobar pulls her film off at a fraction of the Daniels鈥 budget, which in turn was done at a fraction of Sam Raimi鈥檚 Dr. Strange and the Multiverse of Madness catering budget. Metaverses are in, doncha know, the only question being where you happen to be coming from (Marvel Cinematic Universe, indie, Filipino indie) and where you happen to be going (mother coping with grief over lost children, mother attempting to reconcile with estranged child, mother attempting to reconcile with departing child and resurrect her career).
When I say 鈥渇raction of the budget鈥 I mean it; where the Daniels ( and ) can afford to depict over a dozen alternate realities, Escobar can only manage two or three; where the Daniels choreograph elaborate wuxia fight scenes involving extended-strap fanny packs, Escobar stages Fernando Poe Jr.-style meat-and-potato fistfights with plenty of gunfire on the side.
Despite which Ms. Escobar manages to serve up her share of oddball details, stuff even the Daniels haven鈥檛 thought of: Leonor鈥檚 youngest son 鈥听 also called Ronwaldo (Anthony Falcon) 鈥听 happens to be dead, but spends his time in a semitransparent state, talking to mother and sundry family members when he isn鈥檛 busy printing his face out on the photocopier; Rudie, Leonor鈥檚 estranged son, has to handle his mother鈥檚 eccentricities at the same time he鈥檚 attempting to produce her unfinished script at the same time he鈥檚 realized his mother has somehow fled her hospital bed into the TV screen playing in the visitor鈥檚 lounge.
All wonderfully weird but more wonderful yet is the nonchalance with which Leonor and her family accept it all (the beer session between Rudie, ghost Ronwaldo, and their politician father is worth the price of a ticket). What grounds the proceedings 鈥听 what stops the whole confounding confection from just drifting indifferently away 鈥听 is Sheila Francisco鈥檚 Leonor. She鈥檚 not just a dreamer she鈥檚 a mother, and not just to her own family but her family up on the big screen. She created them, feels responsible for them, loves them uncritically, even 鈥 apparently 鈥听 the bad guys.
The scenario Leonor writes is rooted in 1970s and 鈥80s Filipino action melodrama, in the grand tradition of Ramon Revilla, Joseph Estrada, the aforementioned Fernando Poe, Jr. (鈥淩onwaldo鈥 incidentally being the pseudonym Poe used when he directed) 鈥听 men are men, villains are neanderthal, women are beautiful and otherwise useless in a brawl (I鈥檓 looking at you, Rea Molina-as-Isabella, who looks great in a canary feather bikini but is given little else to do, which is the joke). The hero is unfailingly noble if a tad weak on anger management, the villains leer and sneer and dream up sadistic scenarios (Dido de la Paz being the loudest and most sadistic sneerer). Ms. Escobar, a veteran cinematographer, evokes an old-school feel in the action sequences by switching from modern-day wide screen to 4:3 aspect ratio with heavily saturated color palette, adding her own touch by allowing the camera to smoothly pull back or press in (underlining the action), adding editing tweaks to help make Ronwaldo鈥檚 evasions and attacks a little more plausible.
Leonor reacts to the escalating near-biblical violence (one incident recalls the story of Jael), expresses grief over the various deaths, at one point apologizing and reminding us that on a certain level she鈥檚 responsible. Ms. Escobar doesn鈥檛 explore this aspect much 鈥 she鈥檚 got too many other fish to fry, or otherwise mutilate 鈥听 and quickly paints herself in a narrative corner, to the point that she has to take a step back further 鈥听 open up yet another alternate verse, so to speak 鈥听 and ask herself: how can we end this? What鈥檚 the best way out? Her answer recalls Larry Gelbart鈥檚 musical City of Angels or Dennis Potter鈥檚 finale to Pennies From Heaven and might induce groans or applause, depending on how you鈥檝e been responding so far.
I applauded, for the record.
For every plot hole or loose end left dangling, Escobar delivers yet another startling image for us to either pick up or totally miss: the dream about the snail, the languid flow of MRI images of Leonor鈥檚 brain, the young man on the hospital bed congratulated for being pregnant (鈥渋t鈥檚 a miracle, son!鈥), the TV interview of a semitranslucent ghost, the mute child who follows Leonor鈥檚 adventures through various video screens, the moment when Ronwaldo runs down the long street and screams at the camera 鈥淲hat do I do now?!,鈥 the bonkers physician (Tami Monsod) who updates us on Leonor鈥檚 medical condition and dispenses spiritual advice on the side. Critics complain that it鈥檚 too strange, too incoherent but Leonor has the answer as always: when in doubt or confused, you can always just shut up and sing.


