From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
"BALER'- A MOVIE FOR NEO-COLONIALISM
“Baler,” winner for best picture in the present Metro Manila Film Festival, is the first feature film made of the siege of Baler- the last Spanish outpost to surrender to revolutionary forces during the revolutionary war of 1896. The Siege of Baler was based on the diary Spanish Lt. Col. Martin Cerezo, commander of a garrison of Spanish soldiers in Baler, Tayabas( now called the Quezon province), during the Spanish occupation of the Philippines. By December 10, 1898, the Spanish-American War had already ended; Spanish forces in the Philippines, Cuba and elsewhere had already surrendered but the Spanish garrison in Baler didn’t know it. Their headquarters in Iloilo (the last capital of Spain in the Philippines to surrender), forgot to tell them. Katipuneros attacked the 57-man garrison and the Spaniards took shelter in the town church. Instead of rushing the church, the Filipino colonel decided to surround the church with his more superior forces and wait for the Spaniards to run out of food and is forced to surrender. He did not expect the tenacity and fighting spirit of the Spaniards. The siege lasted almost a year, exactly 338 days. Col. Martin Cerezo recounted in his diary the suffering of his soldiers inside the besieged church.
Culture
“BALER” A MOVIE FOR NEO-COLONIALISM
By Arturo P. Garcia
Los Angeles-- “Baler,” winner for best picture in the present Metro Manila Film Festival, is the first feature film made of the siege of Baler- the last Spanish outpost to surrender to revolutionary forces during the revolutionary war of 1896.
The Siege of Baler was based on the diary Spanish Lt. Col. Martin Cerezo, commander of a garrison of Spanish soldiers in Baler, Tayabas( now called the Quezon province), during the Spanish occupation of the Philippines.
By December 10, 1898, the Spanish-American War had already ended; Spanish forces in the Philippines, Cuba and elsewhere had already surrendered but the Spanish garrison in Baler didn’t know it. Their headquarters in Iloilo (the last capital of Spain in the Philippines to surrender), forgot to tell them.
Katipuneros attacked the 57-man garrison and the Spaniards took shelter in the town church. Instead of rushing the church, the Filipino colonel decided to surround the church with his more superior forces and wait for the Spaniards to run out of food and is forced to surrender. He did not expect the tenacity and fighting spirit of the Spaniards. The siege lasted almost a year, exactly 338 days. Col. Martin Cerezo recounted in his diary the suffering of his soldiers inside the besieged church.
“Old Movie” to the” New Movie”
Then somebody in the 1960’s made a short movie of the Baler siege with a Spanish title, “La Campana de Baler.” And so - “Baler” – the movie as they say it is “based on a true epic story.” That is correct as far as the siege is concerned.
The makers of the movie to give it a love angle, however, added the love story between Celso and Felisa. “Baler” deserves, to some movie critic- the best picture award it won; the others are miles behind it.
The hot and steaming romance between Jericho Rosales and Anne Curtis, as Filipino barrio lass, got the sympathy of the audience as the star-crossed lovers, another Romeo and Juliet torn apart by the societies they came from.
What I am terribly angry about is that again, the Philippine Revolution was again made as a background. Instead of paying tribute to our heroes it is a self-flagellation itself because it paid tribute to the Spanish colonizers who were under siege.
Instead, a Filipino mercenary (Jericho) was made a hero and his improbable love story was made a toast of the town. How terrible are we in our moment of victory in a revolution! Where does the heroism of Jose Rizal, Andres Bonifacio and other revolutionaries go?
That is how our scriptwriters and directors and some people in the movie industry is affected by the cash-economy of the present capitalist system.
In this moment when the President of the Philippines is trying to woo Spain and reestablish the neo-colonial relations between Spain and the Philippines , the film-“Baler” will surely click. VIVA ESPANA
“BALER” A MOVIE FOR NEO-COLONIALISM
By Arturo P. Garcia
Los Angeles-- “Baler,” winner for best picture in the present Metro Manila Film Festival, is the first feature film made of the siege of Baler- the last Spanish outpost to surrender to revolutionary forces during the revolutionary war of 1896.
The Siege of Baler was based on the diary Spanish Lt. Col. Martin Cerezo, commander of a garrison of Spanish soldiers in Baler, Tayabas( now called the Quezon province), during the Spanish occupation of the Philippines.
By December 10, 1898, the Spanish-American War had already ended; Spanish forces in the Philippines, Cuba and elsewhere had already surrendered but the Spanish garrison in Baler didn’t know it. Their headquarters in Iloilo (the last capital of Spain in the Philippines to surrender), forgot to tell them.
Katipuneros attacked the 57-man garrison and the Spaniards took shelter in the town church. Instead of rushing the church, the Filipino colonel decided to surround the church with his more superior forces and wait for the Spaniards to run out of food and is forced to surrender. He did not expect the tenacity and fighting spirit of the Spaniards. The siege lasted almost a year, exactly 338 days. Col. Martin Cerezo recounted in his diary the suffering of his soldiers inside the besieged church.
“Old Movie” to the” New Movie”
Then somebody in the 1960’s made a short movie of the Baler siege with a Spanish title, “La Campana de Baler.” And so - “Baler” – the movie as they say it is “based on a true epic story.” That is correct as far as the siege is concerned.
The makers of the movie to give it a love angle, however, added the love story between Celso and Felisa. “Baler” deserves, to some movie critic- the best picture award it won; the others are miles behind it.
The hot and steaming romance between Jericho Rosales and Anne Curtis, as Filipino barrio lass, got the sympathy of the audience as the star-crossed lovers, another Romeo and Juliet torn apart by the societies they came from.
What I am terribly angry about is that again, the Philippine Revolution was again made as a background. Instead of paying tribute to our heroes it is a self-flagellation itself because it paid tribute to the Spanish colonizers who were under siege.
Instead, a Filipino mercenary (Jericho) was made a hero and his improbable love story was made a toast of the town. How terrible are we in our moment of victory in a revolution! Where does the heroism of Jose Rizal, Andres Bonifacio and other revolutionaries go?
That is how our scriptwriters and directors and some people in the movie industry is affected by the cash-economy of the present capitalist system.
In this moment when the President of the Philippines is trying to woo Spain and reestablish the neo-colonial relations between Spain and the Philippines , the film-“Baler” will surely click. VIVA ESPANA
Add Your Comments
Latest Comments
Listed below are the latest comments about this post.
These comments are submitted anonymously by website visitors.
TITLE
AUTHOR
DATE
baler's folly
Thu, May 21, 2009 12:18AM
Myths about the Indio and Filipino
Sun, Mar 1, 2009 5:14AM
I beg to disagree
Sun, Mar 1, 2009 4:49AM
the movie baler is not so best
Sat, Feb 21, 2009 1:25AM
BALER-ANOTHER COMMENT
Mon, Jan 5, 2009 3:30PM
Baler is a Valient Effort - NOT a Neo-Colonial Effort
Mon, Jan 5, 2009 12:04PM
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!
Get Involved
If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.
Publish
Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.
Topics
More
Search Indybay's Archives
Advanced Search
►
▼
IMC Network