‘Thy Womb’
is ostensibly made for the art house circuit and for filmfests abroad. More
than a vehicle for Nora Aunor, it’s an eye-opening glimpse into the life of
poor seafaring people in Tawi-Tawi whose shanties are built on stilts. It shows
the Muslim culture and traditions of the Badjao, complete with an elaborate
wedding ceremony and rituals that will appeal more to foreign audiences who’ll
no doubt find it all exotic. But local viewers used to superficial
entertainment at Christmastime will surely shun it. They just want to be
entertained, not to watch the impoverished lives of marginalized ethnic people.
Take note that when it was
first entered in the filmfest, 'Thy Womb' was rejected by the screening committee
even if it’s the comeback film of the legendary superstar Nora Aunor and
directed by the only Filipino to have won best director at the Cannes Filmfest, Dante Mendoza, who made a name for himself as indie filmmaker and has yet to
experience a box office hit.
‘Thy Womb’ has a very thin story line. Nora is Shaleha, a “hilot” (midwife) and the film starts and ends with a childbirth scene. She’s married to Bembol Roco as Bangas-an. They earn a living by fishing and weaving mats. Nora wants to give Bembol a child but she’s infertile so she scouts around for a new wife for Bembol. After several tries, she finally finds one in Fatima (Lovi Poe, in a short guest role), who requires that Nora leaves Bembol the moment she begets a child. It’s Nora herself who helps her deliver the baby. The end.
‘Thy Womb’ has a very thin story line. Nora is Shaleha, a “hilot” (midwife) and the film starts and ends with a childbirth scene. She’s married to Bembol Roco as Bangas-an. They earn a living by fishing and weaving mats. Nora wants to give Bembol a child but she’s infertile so she scouts around for a new wife for Bembol. After several tries, she finally finds one in Fatima (Lovi Poe, in a short guest role), who requires that Nora leaves Bembol the moment she begets a child. It’s Nora herself who helps her deliver the baby. The end.
More than dwelling on the
story of Shaleha, the film is more interested in showing the lives of the
people in Tawi-Tawi, full of local color, with the war intruding every now and
then with gunshots heard elsewhere.
Technically, the movie is
quite superior, particularly the lyrical cinematography by Odyssey Flores
that’s full of awesome nature shots like a cluster of huts in the sea while
it’s raining or some butanding whales swimming beside the boat of Nora and Bembol.
The muted, abbreviated
style of ‘Thy Womb’ is more akin to
that of ‘Lola’ than Mendoza’s more
violent works like ‘Kinatay,’ ‘Tirador’ and ‘Captive.’ Viewers who prefer fast paced, event-oriented films will
find it tedious viewing, including the abrupt “bitin” ending when things are just starting to get more
interesting.
The characters are also so
underwritten in Henry Burgos script you have to make up your own interpretation
when it comes to their motivations. Why is Nora so obsessed in finding a new
wife for Bembol and is not even jealous at all? Why did Lovi who’s young and
beautiful easily agree to marry a man old enough to be her father?
In foreign films, it’s
usually indicated that “no animal is hurt in the making of this movie.” But
here, we saw a cow helplessly falling into the sea and then being ruthlessly
decapitated on cam. We closed our eyes and couldn’t bear to watch that scene.
As for the acting, we have
to salute Ate Guy for accepting this role where she is totally deglamorized. She
really looks like a sunburnt Badjao woman who’s past middle age. Her face is
puffy, wrinkled, has definitely seen better days. She has no explosive acting
highlights, no volatile confrontation scenes here. Everything is placid,
controlled but poignant. But as always, her eyes say a lot, easily depicting
the pain she’s going through while finding a new wife for her husband. She
doesn’t display her usual kind of intense acting here that her fans often
imitate, including her trademark delivery of her lines. She just becomes her
role here, totally. She’s not Nora, she’s Shaleha, a Badjao native. And for
that, she absolutely deserves the filmfest best actress award. (MARIO BAUTISTA, Peoples’Journal)
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