1998 | 1hr 56m | Written by Jun Lana, Directed by Marilou Diaz-Abaya
Date: Friday, November 4, 2022 | 7:30pm
Venue: NYU King Juan Carlos Center | 53 Washington Sq S, NYC 10012
Open to the public; proof of vaccination required
RSVP link: https://bit.ly/panawin2022
Talkback with: Fiel Zabat, award-winning production designer of major works by Diaz-Abaya. Panawin curator Gil Quito, author of a biography/career survey of Diaz-Abaya, featured in the anthology Direk, winner of the Philippines’ 2020 Gintong Aklat (Golden Book) Award in the arts and humanities.
Synopsis
On an island in the 1950s, young Pepito assists his mother as she goes around practicing her trade as the only local midwife left in the village. He gets involved in the lives and passions of other inhabitants whose beliefs, struggles and aspirations lead him to an understanding of himself and the role he must play in the life of his fellow villagers. In a story inflected with flashes of magic realism, the remote island becomes a mirror of the wider world.
Notes on the Film and Director
Visitors to the Philippines who are keen to observe its lively film scene are struck by the prominence and preponderance of women film directors, especially in its mainstream cinema. This was not the case when Abaya began her career in 1980, after finishing a Communication Arts degree at Assumption College in Manila and filmmaking courses at the Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles and the London International Film School. At that time, one could count with the fingers of one hand the number of female directors in the industry. Her resonating renown as one of the Philippines’ premier directors, irrespective of gender, paved the way for the rise of women filmmakers in the industry and has inspired indie filmmakers of all gender leanings to follow suit. Her influence on Philippine art and culture was recognized last June with the posthumous conferment of National Artist, the country’s highest honor in the arts.
Abaya jumped to the vanguard of Philippine filmmakers at the start of her career with a trilogy of highly acclaimed feminist films (Brutal, Moral, and Karnal) that she created with screenplay-writer Ricky Lee. In the Navel of the Sea came at a turning point in her career when she was expanding to works focusing on wider social and metaphysical themes. This film foreshadows the epic films that she would soon direct, notably the biographical Jose Rizal, at that time the most expensive Philippine film ever made. In the Navel evinces the compassion for marginalized communities and characters that infused many of Abaya’s films. Beyond her activities as director and mentor in a film school she established, she was an active member of the Concerned Artists of the Philippines founded by Lino Brocka to rally against the Martial Law dictatorship and its overbearing media censorship.
Abaya, an avid scuba diver, shot most of In the Navel in the fishing hamlets in Batangas, and her love for nature and the sea suffuses the film, glowingly photographed by Romeo Vitug. In the Navel captures the backwardness of the island community but also its wonderment, and consequently, the story has an air of both gritty realism and myth. (Abaya was a fan of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and his magic realist novels.) In its depiction of the cycle of births, passions, deaths, and redemption, the film turns sensual lives in an insular community into a microcosm of humanity grappling with all too familiar yet all too mysterious metaphysical dilemmas.
— Gil Quito
Curator
Awards
- Singapore International Film Festival – FIPRESCI/NETPAC Award
- Star Awards for Movies – Best Original Screenplay, Cinematographer
- Film Academy of the Philippines Awards – Best Sound
- Gawad Urian – 10 nominations including Best Picture, Direction, Screenplay, Actress, Cinematography
About the Screenplay Writer
Jun Lana was an unknown, aspiring writer when he entered his screenplay Mga Bangka sa Tag-Araw/Boats in Summer in the prestigious Palanca Memorial Awards competition. Abaya, by then an already established director, was one of the judges and she immediately optioned Lana’s screenplay (which won the grand prize), later changing the title to In the Navel of the Sea. Lana has himself developed into one of the Philippines’ brightest and most prolific writer-directors. He was last in New York in July for the screening of Big Time, his social satire on the injustices of Duterte’s drug war, at the New York Asian Film Festival at Lincoln Center. A selection of his award-wining films have been acquired for distribution by Netflix.