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Filipino director searches for salvation

By Jason Gutierrez (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-07-23 14:35
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Director uses films to send a message to his estranged son

Filipino director searches for salvation

Philippine indie film director Jim Libiran smokes a cigarette during a recent interview at his house in Manila. Noel Celis / Agence France-Presse 

MANILA - Indie film director Jim Libiran was looking for personal salvation when he gatecrashed Philippine cinema with a movie tackling Manila's violent gangland culture.

Three years later the former journalist is among a handful of emerging Filipino directors leading a renaissance of the local movie industry, yet his motives for tackling gritty social issues remain the same.

"I would like to say there is a deeper philosophy why I am doing this," the animated and passionate 42-year-old told AFP.

"But really there are only two reasons. One, is I wanted to find relevance, my own place under the sun. And two, trying to get a message out to my son."

Libiran has not seen his young son in two years after a bitter separation from his former wife.

"My movies will serve as the vehicles to impart lessons to my son, to help him understand what is happening around him," he said.

Libiran said he is never at ease being compared with big-budget Filipino directors specializing in what he calls mindless, song-and-dance movie formulas that rake in millions.

"I do not make perfect films," said Libiran, who spent 23 years as a newspaper and television reporter before venturing into film. "What I try to say in the movies are the same things I have been reporting all along as a journalist."

Libiran left his job as news director of a television station in 2006 after becoming frustrated by what he felt was a general sense of apathy from a public numbed by corruption and poverty blighting this country of 92 million.

"It was frustrating. No one was listening to journalists anymore, nobody cared," he said.

"But journalism is not the only way to tell the truth, so I tried my hand at another craft, entered a new career."

Shortly after quitting his television job, Libiran enrolled in an advanced script writing class where he would meet future collaborators, some of whom have also carved out a name for themselves.

For his thesis, Libiran revisited a story on warring gangs in Manila's sprawling Tondo slum district which he had previously written as a television reporter.

He gathered members from 52 gangs and asked them to appear as real life characters in the movie that depicted their lifestyle.

The film, which was titled Tribu - the Filipino term for gang - gave the public a glimpse of a very graphic, brutal underbelly of Manila's gang culture. It received critical acclaim at the Pusan International Film Festival in 2008, and in the same year won the Le Pari de L'Avenir (Youth Jury Prize) at the Paris Cinema Festival.

However, Libiran's fame remains confined to die-hard indie film followers in the Philippines, and his venture into the movie industry has cost him money. Labiran said Tribu cost him about 5 million pesos ($110,000) in production and marketing costs, a huge sum for a director with no major studio support.

Yet he remains committed to his new career and is busy putting the finishing touches to a second movie called Happyland, which chronicles the story of a group of priests using football to woo children away from gangs.

Agence France-Presse