(Re)conceiving the bayot: ‘Miss Bulalacao’

Excerpt: But for its decidedly rural locale, this film almost has a “slipstream” quality to it. To wit: into the otherwise perfectly mundane life of a Cebuano seaside village comes a most extraordinary visitation: after being crowned “Miss Bulalacao” in their community’s fiesta bayot pageant, teenaged Dodong flees into the mango grove to escape yet another one of his drunken father’s beatings; there he encounters robed creatures of light and falls into a deep slumber. He awakes all muddied and disheveled the following morning, and ambles back to his unhappy home, where only his stepmother gives him any succor. A few weeks later he is discovered to be pregnant, and this sets off a series of small-town and rumor-fueled events that predictably gets chronically infirm and desperate neighbors and the town’s parish priest involved, as well as a bevy of superstitious and religiously inclined matrons whose wild imaginings cover the entire gamut of possible explanations for the decidedly strange occurrence—diabolical possession on one hand, and “immaculate conception” on the other.

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Breaking Down the Scene: The Binisaya Film Festival

It could be said that Binisaya’s current curatorial culture is an after-effect of the Cebuano New Wave. Some works that define this exciting, eclectic filmmaking era include Jerrold Tarog and Ruel Antipuesto’s Confessional (2007), Remton Zuasola’s one-take drama Ang Damgo ni Eleuteria (2010), Victor Villanueva’s absurdist horror My Paranormal Romance (2011), Ivan Zaldarriaga’s zombie thriller Di Ingon ‘Nato (2011), Ara Chawdhury’s queer magical realist debut feature Miss Bulalacao (2015), Christian Linaban’s stoner comedy Superpsychocebu (2016), along with festival founder Keith Deligero’s Kordero ng Diyos (2012).

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How Do You Make SUPERPSYCHOCEBU?

We are admittedly far from finished. We recognize the real work and real experiment happens now, after the premiere. We have some experience with wide-scale marketing and distribution, thanks to our experience working with Cinema One and the Active Vista film festival. We are also taking tips from the tradition of the Arong Brothers who brought projectors and set up screenings of their film “Ang Manok ni San Pedro,” continued by Keith Deligero and the Binisaya film festival with its guerilla screenings. We’re glad for the establishment of Cinematheques and small screening spaces all over the provinces and have reached out for screenings in Davao, Dumaguete, and General Santos, for example. We are also open to bookings and screening requests.

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