Monthly Archives

September 2015

Movie Review

Review: Heneral Luna

This might not turn out to be coherent enough to be a proper movie review. It sure won’t show off an informed opinion of the historical biopic. I guess this would just be a documentation of my thoughts and feelings after watching the film Heneral Luna. I have a strong inkling I would need to go back to these someday, to refresh and remember.

As a kid in school I looked forward to the challenge of Math and English, while cringing at the very thought of my Filipino and History subjects. I hated the dates, the strange-sounding names of people, places and events that I had to memorize for exams. It was very hard for me to remember them all, and my gloom extended to an aversion of the subjects and all their reincarnations from Sibika to HEKASI to Kasaysayan. It was a deficiency that followed me all through college, and one that led me to be a part of the growing crowd of Filipinos who knew little about our own history, save from the holidays that they inspired.

Thus, shame was the first feeling that crept inside my heart while watching Heneral Luna. Shame that I was watching it as if it was that Maze Runner sequel, something bright and novel, shiny and unknown, instead of seeing it as a story that I have learned by heart since my formative years. I could very well have been a foreigner in the theater, only I didn’t need the subtitles.

I felt sadness, the suffocating kind, watching a story unfold with the knowledge that it doesn’t end with a win, not for anyone there. Not in any way that mattered most. It’s like reading your favorite book again and again, hoping the character you love doesn’t die this time. But of course he does anyway.

I felt empathy, and a shaky sense of understanding. Heroes are not saints. Very far from it, if the way they curse, fight, scheme, and kill are any indication. Even the villains are not pure evil, but people too, imperfect in the principles they cling to, and the ones they choose to bend.

I laughed, so I must have felt joy too, and it was the kind that lingered and made the darker scenes all the more oppressive. I liked these characters. I felt for them. The stakes were high and I wanted them to win. I would have loved to have a drink, or to share ensaymada and tsaa with Luna, as long as he promised to not scream out Artikulo Uno at me. Or maybe it would be okay to hear it shouted at my face, to save as a reminder, an important memory.

I felt anger, the kind that builds inside you and threatens to explode unless you walk it off or throw out curse words into the night. Punyeta! Inutil! Gago! Even after that I didn’t really feel much better, because the movie wasn’t an escape like most other movies. It was a two-hour commentary of the life we live now, of the kind of people who lead us, and of the kind of people we are. It was a forced reflection, a punch to the gut, a hand pushing our faces up to the truth that we, as Filipinos, as a nation, are still where Aguinaldo, Mabini, Buencamino, and Luna were hundreds of years ago. Roads may now be pavement, carriages are now metal, but in principle, or in lack thereof, we are still the same as our forefathers.

I wish I paid more attention to my Filipino and Kasaysayan classes. I wish I could talk about the accuracy of the facts in the film, and separate the truth from fiction. I wish I could knowledgeably debate on the topic of Aguinaldo, and that I could articulate my feelings in ways other than my current aversion to five-peso coins. I wish I was proficient enough in Tagalog to write this in that language, and learn to be even a smidgen of the poet that Luna was. I wish I knew Luna, and other characters and plots in our history books, and the faces on our currencies. I’m glad I wish for these things with the heavy heart that I carry around now, because it means I will try to make up for lost time. And maybe this time, now that I’m older, it would be easier for me to remember.

Photo/video credits to Heneral Luna Official, Jerrold Tarog sites.

Thank you Jerrold Tarog, John Arcilla, and the rest of the brilliant cast and crew. Let’s do more of this please?

Favorite lines:

“Para kayong mga birhen na naniniwala sa pagibig ng isang puta.”

“Ganito ba talaga ang tadhana natin? Kalaban ng kalaban. Kalaban ng kakampi. Nakakapagod.”

“Bigyan ninyo ako ng tatlong araw.”

“Tanggalan sila ng ranggo!”

“Ano bang akala niya, ibang bansa na ang Kabite?”

“Paano ako lalaban? Kakagatin ko sila?”

“Nasubukan mo na bang hulihin ang hangin?”

“Giyera ang asawa mo. Ako ang kabit.”

“Ang taong may damdamin ay hindi alipin.”

“Ingles-inglesin mo ako sa bayan ko? Hulihin na yan!”

 

 

Writing Now

StrangeLit Happened and It was Awesome

Sometime this year, I decided I’m going to be an author. That was around Holy Week I think. Come to think of it, this is the second year in a row that my epiphanies came after Easter, and they felt so real and intense that I actually acted on them. It’s not a bad yearly habit to fall into.

So there I was, trimming down an old manuscript and finishing another one, when I found out about StrangeLit, a paranormal/urban fantasy writing workshop sponsored by Buqo and Bronze Age Media. I thought, writing workshop? Yes please! Then, paranormal? I don’t know…

StrangeLit-writing-workshop-bronze-age-media

I do read paranormal. I’ve read the Mediator, Blood & Chocolate, the Vampire Diaries, Wicked Lovely, and yes, the Twilight Saga before it became a joke. But I’ve never written in the genre. But then I already had a story in my head, and with a little twist, I thought I could make it fit the genre.

Yesterday was our deadline and our last day of class/last official meetup wherein we evaluated the experience. I shared my piece about it already, but I was half-asleep then, and maybe I’m still half-asleep now. But here are my thoughts anyway:

  • It all starts with an idea. There are stories that have been living in your head (and heart) for a while now. My StrangeLit submission, Majesty, was one of those stories. It gave me a good head start, and I needed that given that the workshop was running for only five weeks.
  • It ends with an ending. The first draft of the first book I’ve ever written wound up to 160k words, precisely because it was winding round and round with no end in sight. Since then I’ve learned to outline, which someone like me with neurotic tendencies (haha) needs. The happy output of that is that I knew at the beginning how the story would end, and soon I was able to write the first chapter, and then the ending. I understood though that the ending wasn’t set in stone. I could always change it. But it’s good to have written it, because it meant my story was guided by something.
  • Writing is work. It is. But it’s happy, fulfilling work. Sometimes, I could sit in front of my laptop with fingers flying all over the keyboard and I’d be happy with the results. Sometimes I’d have finished eating a box of chocolates and still be staring at a blinking cursor (true story). But still you have to sit there and write something even if you think it’s crap. Which leads me to my next thought–
  • Writer’s block is a myth. Or it’s just the general term for when you’re too lazy, or too busy, or you think you suck too much to write anything. Maybe writer’s block is just the universally accepted term for self-doubt. Either way, if you know in your heart that you love writing, you have to fight it. And the only way to do that is to get your butt in a chair and keep it there until you get your word count up.
  • Deadline is a writer’s BFF. Having a deadline was a good motivator, and being reminded of it every so often by our periodic submission requirements was one of the best weapons against writer’s block. I learned to work back and create my personal deadlines, and I discovered a few things about how I write and how far I could push myself. For one, I learned that although I cram in everything else, I don’t cram when I have writing deadlines. Because priorities 😀
  • And so is peer pressure. The good kind. Following #StrangeLit on Twitter gave me a literal live feed of how everyone was doing, and it was the best kind of pressure. The encouraging, uplifting, cheerleading kind. I had the best classmates and the best mentors in the world for this workshop.
  • Write the next book. Recently, I learned the cure to that debilitating feeling of sadness, obscurity, and that general feeling of suck-ititis: just write. I just need to back to the reason why I’m doing this in the first place, and hold on to that. I’m going to make mistakes, and sometimes I will suck, but I’m going to learn and try new things and get better. And the only way to do that is to keep writing.

I’m glad I pushed away my doubts and worries and signed up for this workshop. I love this class. I wish I could give you all big hugs. I would have hugged you all yesterday but I was drowsy, and you might have found it weird. But know that I am grateful and I am proud of all of you. I can’t wait to read all your works!

Thank you Buqo, Bronze Age Media, and of course, the real rock star, Mina V. Esguerra, for giving us the opportunity to do this. Thank you to our awesome mentors Marian Tee, Kate Evangelista, Paolo Chikiamco, and Budjette Tan for sharing your wisdom/encouragement/pompoms/general awesomeness. Because of all of you, Majesty will be out in Buqo bundles in a few weeks, maybe with other ghost stories, maybe with other stories about death. Maybe we will have a book launch event (cosplay? really?), then we will have a book tour. People will see our work, and our work will be read, and hopefully loved too. Until then, I think I’m going to sleep for a few more hours, and then yes, write the next book 🙂

strangelitbadge-conquerblack

P.S. Thanks to Tara Frejas for the badge! High five fellow StrangeLit finisher *hugs*

 

Book Review

Review: Learning to Fall by Mina V. Esguerra

“Go out with a stereotypical romance novel hero WHO ISN’T YOUR TYPE.”

Avid reader and art student Steph is participating in a monthly blog challenge to Live Like Fiction, and this was the task for October. When Grayson, former co-captain of her university rugby team, walks into her class, she knows it’s meant to be – she has to go out with this guy. Even if she’s never been attracted to big, hunky, athletic types. With Grayson’s “player” reputation off the field, Steph thinks he’ll be good for one date that’ll be worth blogging about, and that’s it.

But you know how it goes: Soon, it becomes more than just one date – and Steph and Grayson are caught up in “living like fiction.” How long can they keep playing their roles before reality steps in?

I received an ARC from the author in return for an honest review.

The ARC called this Someone Else’s Fantasy, and the working title made sense given the story’s premise. Steph, art student and book blogger, has joined a blog challenge that gave her something to do each month, something completely out of her usual rhythm. For October, the challenge is to “Go out with a stereotypical romance novel hero WHO ISN’T YOUR TYPE.” Enters Grayson Price in Steph’s drawing studio, the tattooed, big and blonde rugby captain, posing for the art students to draw with barely any clothes on. So Steph thinks, well, That wasn’t so hard. He just walked into the room, didn’t he?

Learning to Fall is the steamiest Mina V. Esguerra book I’ve read, and that’s coming from Falling Hard (previously titled The Harder We Fall). I just thought people would want to know this very important fact. But then, the steam was done really well, and does not distract from the book’s plot but actually helps it along. Steph and Grayson both do not have their lives in order (who does, really?) but they’re both trying to get there. They have their own stubborn ways of doing it, and they also have unique demons they have to face. One of the things I appreciated about the book was that Steph and Grayson learned to depend on each other, to help each other, while still learning to figure a few things out on their own. That’s a key thing to a relationship that works, I think. To be able to be an individual, while also being one-half of a whole.

Learning to Fall is available on Amazon! One-click it here!

***

About Mina V. Esguerra

Mina V. Esguerra writes contemporary romance, young adult, and new adult novellas. Through her blog Publishing in Pajamas (minavesguerra.com), she documents her experiments in publishing.

When not writing romance, she is president of communications firm Bronze Age Media, development communication consultant, indie publisher, professional editor, wife, and mother. She created the workshop series “Author at Once” for writers and publishers, and #romanceclass for aspiring romance writers.

Her young adult/fantasy trilogy Interim Goddess of Love is a college love story featuring gods from Philippine mythology. Her contemporary romance novellas won the Filipino Readers’ Choice awards for Chick Lit in 2012 (Fairy Tale Fail) and 2013 (That Kind of Guy).

Contact her at minavesguerra [at] gmail [dot] com / @minavesguerra on Twitter. Visit her Amazon Author Page. Find her books here.