• 2 days ago
The brilliance of Filipino filmmaker Brillante Mendoza. Award-winning Filipino filmmaker Brillante Mendoza shares insights about his new movie Thy Womb. See more at: http://gulfnews.com/gntv
Transcript
00:00The Womb was a film about a childless couple and it was shot in Tawi-Tawi in the southernmost
00:11part of the Philippines.
00:12It's a Muslim island and this couple belongs to a minority tribe, they're called the Sama
00:18Bajau and the lead protagonist is a midwife but she's childless.
00:24So basically the story is about her looking for the woman to bear a child for her husband.
00:33Honestly I don't know anything about the island, I don't know anything about the people.
00:37The reason why we shot in Tawi-Tawi, only because we were given a grant by the Film
00:43Development Council of the Philippines for the post-production of this film.
00:47So I was asked to go there to discover what we can do about the island, about the people
00:55there.
00:56And for me it was really quite a discovery when we saw the island.
01:00For me it's a pity that, you know, not a lot of people, that a lot of Filipinos knew
01:05that we have such a beautiful country, that we have such a beautiful island with beautiful
01:09people like the Bajau.
01:12To most of us we knew this place only as a very violent place with aggressive people.
01:18We don't know that this island actually Christians and Muslims, they really coexist and they
01:23live a very harmonious life.
01:26And for me that's just what really attracted me to make a film about this island, about
01:32this people.
01:33So we started doing our research and the story was actually based on a real life story of
01:41this couple.
01:42So I thought that it was a perfect story to depict and to show the kind of people that
01:50lives here and at the same time showing their culture, their tradition and everything about them.
01:56For me, I'm really proud about this film.
02:00Not only because it turns out to be a lot of people are liking it and praising the performance
02:08but even more than that, it's like being proud of a Filipino filmmaker.
02:15Finally, I could share something to the world and to the Filipinos themselves about what
02:20we have in our country.
02:23For me, religion is just like secondary.
02:26A Christian can appreciate it as much as a Muslim can or other religion can.
02:31So it's the story of life, the story of human being, it's the story of people, it's the story
02:35of humanity.
02:36At the end of the day, it's a story of us, a story that we can all identify with, a story
02:42of unselfish love.
02:45In this time and age where we all think about commercialism and technology and to see something
02:53like this, a story that is so pure, a story that is not almost existing right now and
03:03we realize that it's time and age to see people like this.
03:06So for us, it's like an awakening, it's like an awakening, a reminder of our own humanity,
03:12of our own existence.
03:13So that's what I would like people to take in this film, regardless of race, regardless
03:19of religion, and regardless of nationality.

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