
- Alaala Ng Madaling-Araw
- Kukunin Na Ng Meralco Ang Likod Namin
- Susunduin Ko Si Ledh Sa Simbahan
- Sometime In August
- Pagtingin Sa Salamin
"This is the portrait of the artist's
family. We are introduced to his elder sister, mother, the baby,
and his brother-in-law. It is now time before dawn, and as always
these days, he is unable to get to sleep. The confused images on
the screen have a strange power to them and effectively convey to
viewers the inner life of the filmmaker."
Hiroshi Minami, 19TH TOKYO VIDEO FESTIVAL
by Vincenz C. Serrano
"The ideal video camera is something that you can plug in your
brain and will record everything that you see." So says 23-year
old Khavn De La Cruz, a video camera artist whose film ALAALA NG
MADALING-ARAW (MEMORY OF DAWN) won the Bronze Award in the 19th
Tokyo Video Festival.
Picked from a pool of 1,947 entries from 36
countries, ALAALA weaves images of the artist's family and personal
life with a strong, if not sad, narrative thread. Khavn gives us
images of the day that transpired: his mother preparing merienda,
his sister playing with her infant son, his brother-in-law and himself
picking up his sister from school. In the end, though, his reminiscences
take him well into the dawn, when he finds it difficult to sleep.
In concise, poetic narration, Khavn takes us
deep into the psyche of a young artist. The images shift quickly,
like someone whose gaze flutters from one interesting item to another.
The language is direct without being hip-smart, simple without being
droll. This approach gives the film the quality of a dream.
"ALAALA started with the concept of a
man who couldn't sleep because he reflected on the day that had
passed," says the Quezon City-based artist. "The images
I picked, however, were spontaneous, they came from my subconscious."
This is in line with his approach to "shoot whatever I see."
He explains: "The visuals weren't scripted.
I picked images on the spot, like a Garfield on a scooter, a poster
of Dragonball Z (referring to some shots in another film 5 SHORTS).
The 'vagueness' becomes concretized by the things around you. I
think of it as capturing the moment."
Khavn started filmmaking when he was in 3rd
year college at the Ateneo de Manila University. "I was enrolled
in Kidlat Tahimik's class. The best thing that I learned from him
is that a filmmaker doesn't have to wait for a 16mm to create a
piece. He can tell his story using a handycam. And that's the point,
really, of my work: I tell stories."
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A resident’s lament.
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I was assigned to fetch my sister from the
church. It’s evening. Waiting for a jeep. The choir is practicing
some musical. Playing pingpong etcetera. Walking to the main road.
Going home.
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a. Darkest Night On A Sunny Day
It’s so sunny, yet inside me it’s
so dark. I remember the night.
b. Rain Rain Go Away
It’s raining and I’m sick in
bed. I grab a guitar and sing so that the rain leaves.
c. Sunday
It’s Sunday and my parents aren’t
home; just us siblings. Kids are playing outside. Chickens.
For more info on
Kamias : Memory Of Forgetting and other films by Khavn, click
here.
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