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Mario Bautista, has been with the entertainment industry for more than 4 decades. He writes regular columns for People's Journal and Malaya.

Aug 15, 2022

THE BIG WINNERS IN THE RECENTLY CONCLUDED CINEMALAYA 2022 / REVIEW OF BEST PICTURE 'THE BASEBALL PLAYER'

 










































      JM SAN JOSE AS KHALID & TOMMY ALEJANDRINO AS AMIR IN 'BASEBALL PLAYER'


THE BIG WINNERS in the recently concluded Cinemalaya 2022 are “The Baseball Player” as best picture, “Blue Room” as Special Jury Prize and “12 Weeks” as NETPAC award for full length film. 


Best director is Maan Asuncion Dagnalan for “Blue Room”. 


Best actress is (as everyone predicted) Max Eigenmann as the 40-year old lead character who gets pregnant for the first time in “12 Weeks”. 


Best actor is Tommy Alejandrino as the Muslim teenager who wants to be a baseball player but eventually chooses to be a local soldier in “The Baseball Player”. 


Best supporting actor is Soliman Cruz as the brazenly corrupt police chief in “Blue Room”. 


Best supporting actress is Ruby Ruiz as the supportive mother of an aspiring boxer in “Ginhawa”. 


The three films are indeed the most deserving among all the entries in this year’s festival, so we’re not surprised that the major trophies were divided among them. 


“Baseball Player” also won the best editing and best screenplay (by Carlo Obispo) awards. 


“Blue Room” also won the best cinematography and best production design awards.


But let it be said that none among the entries this year is as satisfying and memorable as past winners like “Jay” by the late Francis Pasion, “Endo” by Jade Castro, “Last Supper No. 3” by Roni Velasco, “Ang Babae sa Septic Tank” by Marlon Rivera, “Pamilya Ordinaryo” and “Quick Change” by the late Eduardo Roy, and “Edward” by Thop Nazareno.


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“The Baseball Player” by Carlo Obispo (who also did the memorable Cinemalaya 2013 movie “Purok 7” with Julian Trono giving his most memorable performance ever and “1-2-3 Gasping for Air” about child prostitutes) is the first local film to tackle the war in Mindanao from the point of view of innocent children who get caught in its violence and complexities. 


The film opens with an oprhan boy, Khalid (JM San Jose), being adopted by a family. 


The eldest teenage boy, Amir (Tommy Alejandrino, a theatre actor), acts as his older brother or Kuya who tries to connect with him and takes good care of him. 


It’s only later that we learn that Khalid’s entire family were all killed in the war and he is clearly traumatized by the experience. 


Amir is a promising baseball player and his coach is encouraging him to go on training for the sport and be a professional player who can go abroad. 


But he is being pressured by his family members to train and serve in their camp of Moro freedom fighters


The film is told very serenely, with beautifully photographed rustic scenes of idyllic mountains and enticing rivers with crystal clear waters, actually shot in Tarlac. 


But in the final scene, all the tranquility is shattered by the incessant sound of deafening gunfire.  


In the end, you get the feeling that the writer-director took a very abbreviated route in telling his story. 


We would have appreciated more Amir’s dilemma if we were given a bit more insight about the crisis their whole family is going through. 


Even the baseball scenes are not enough for us to be able to fully emphatize with Amir and his passion for the game. 


And we’re surprised when war suddenly erupts and we see that Amir has already made a decision.


The film is the type that leaves you hanging. Those who don’t like “bitin” endings will find it wanting. 


So what really happened to the baseball player of the title? We don’t know. 


But maybe that’s the real intention of the filmmaker. He wants to agitate us. 


In this life where we are unsure of many things, he wants you to draw your own conclusions. 


But that concluding scene of the boy Khalid crying and screaming “Kuya! Kuya! Kuya!” is really haunting. 


Both JM and Tommy are excellent in their respective roles.


We can’t help but think that given a bigger budget (since the seed financing given by Cinemalaya is really small), maybe Director Obispo could have made a more articulate and more polished film that is not rough around the edges. 


As it is, they even give top billing in the cast credits to Sue Prado and Arnold Reyes when Sue has a very minor role as a Muslim teacher and Arnold appears whimsically in only one scene as a ghost who can repair broken bicycles.


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