Sunday, October 5, 2014

SHEER TALENT [T'yanak In the Making]



My ride came early and so I was at the location an hour before the 6AM call time. Vaguely familiar friendly faces greeted me at the theater hall’s entrance as I was kindly ushered in by Michael, a production staffer who’s done bit roles too in some Gallaga-Reyes projects. “Andiyan na po si Direk Jo,” he assured me and as if on cue, Direk Jo and some more staffers walked in from a dark hall. She greeted me, “Ang aga mo!” I wanted to say, “Siyempre, excited eh…” but I didn’t. 

I was shown to a big dressing room which had a sign with names on the door: Joaqui Tupaz and under it, Talents. Of course, I am not Joaqui so we can all now presume that I am one of THE talents. I settled for a chair on the leftmost of a long dresser. As an OCD “member”, I am never comfortable sitting in rows with other people on my either sides. I would always prefer taking a seat on either ends. But that’s another story. 


Moments later and a couple of selfies after, more and more people came in. The aircon was in full blast and the once empty room was brimming with young students from various colleges. Most of them are either majoring in film or communication arts. They were to play bit parts in the movie, too. The movie? T’yanak.



Photo Credit: T'yanak 2014 Facebook Page


I rarely request for a photo op with celebrities and actors but I just had to have this shot of Tom Rodriguez as proof to my office associates that I was really in a film shoot with him. Poor guy, basing from the look on his (very handsome) face, I bet he was praying I don't request for a selfie shot with him.   (Naturally, I didn't.)

Directed by Peque Gallaga and Lore Reyes, the official Facebook page offers the movie’s synopsis:  Savage murders terrify the once-quiet town of Puting Bato, and the chief suspect is the foundling baby who has won the heart of Julie (Judy Ann Santos). Her brother Mark (Tom Rodriguez) and his fiancée Madie (Solenn Heussaff) become the target of the T’yanak. A widower who lost his wife in a vicious T’yanak attack (Sid Lucero) adds a brutal layer of terror in a town already petrified by fear.

And this is where we (meaning the cast-of-thousands and I) step in. 

The film’s last day of shoot was the “massacre sequence” where unsuspecting moviegoers got more than what they cared for. The sequence is a horrific mélange of blood, dead bodies, pandemonium, stampede and chaos. All wrought by the tiny critter. Packed in a small theater, the cast and crew had to finish all sequences in record time.  The crowd scene had to be choreographed and blocked with precision. Take after take, the students, along with other “seasoned” performers like me, had to create the feeling of terror and urgency. You would never imagine how much chaos can be made in such an orderly manner. Only in films. 

The director, Peque Gallaga, would later inform the cast that over 80 scenes were filmed in those ten hours only for that single sequence. Wow! So how did they do that? Well, one thing I always look forward to when working with the Gallaga- Lore Reyes tandem is that these guys and their creative team are such meticulous workers that one gets the feeling that everything was pre-planned and well-organized. Such quality sends a strong message that “we are all professionals here” and that “we take these things really, really seriously” and then have loads of fun along the way.

Photo credit: T'yanak 2014 Facebook Page

With a shot list that runs like clockwork, the team moves from one scene to another. And master story-tellers that they are, Gallaga and Reyes have the ability to make things very clear in the minds of the actors that even bit players know where they “stood” in the whole scheme of things.

Which brings me to the real stars of the day. 

Some sixty young students were cast as talents for the “massacre sequence”. And watching these young talents work their **ses off couldn’t make one any prouder. They were delivering some of the most authentic and heartfelt performances of their lives. And deliver they did. Even with some bruises and unwanted bumps, the young talents endured the takes after takes with a discipline that any mentor can be proud of.  I felt their maturity and willingness to rise to the demands of professional work. Unfortunately, to respect their privacy, I choose not to reveal their schools but I am rather sure that there is a present slew of photo updates among film and production students.


The future looks very bright!

If what I saw during that shoot was any indication of the movie industry’s future in the country, well I can say that it would be in good hands. Say, even in the next twenty years or so.

Photo credit: Rap Ramirez/T'yanak 2014 Facebook page

BUT of course, we are forever fans.

I almost lost it when Judy Ann Santos walked into the dimly-lit theater, ready for her scenes. At this point I must confess that I am a HUGE fan of the actor- TV host-celebrity-star-mother-chef. Having watched her transform from a child actress into one of the industry’s respected personalities, the multi-hyphenated description doesn’t even come close to what this talented woman can really bring to the table.  Even other directors whom I have talked to before have nothing but good things to say about Juday. “Napakababait na tao. Napakabuting mag-asawa (referring of course to her and husband Ryan Agoncillo),” offered one multi-awarded writer-director who had worked with the couple many times over. Indeed, a no-nonsense performer like Juday needed only clear directions and seconds later she would be delivering into the cameras an explosive performance that is devoid of distracting mannerisms and perfectly natural.

Now, the fact that her scenes required her to clutch a baby (real, live one) who was wailing and distraught, it came in handy for Juday who has brought up two children of her own to instinctively know what to do and how to get the very young thespian to cooperate for the cameras that you’d want to heave and sigh, “Aaaaaaaaaaw!”

In the massacre sequence, Juday’s character is on the run for her and her ward’s life. In the finished cut you would probably see Juday bloodied, bruised and bent, crawling on all fours for her dear life while trying to protect a horrific monster of a foundling infant from a vigilante gone mad, very mad (Cheers to Lucero for delivering bloodcurdling scenes). But will Juday prevail? 

I guess we all have to watch the movie to find out. After all I was only in one scene and unless they decide to leave it on the cutting floor, we will all need to hold or breath and struggle not to blink in order not to miss it! Ah, the celebrity of being a Talent!

T'yanak opens on October 29 exclusively in SM Cinemas nationwide as part of the Horror Film Festival along with three other films: “Hukluban: Gabi Kung Sumikat ang Araw”, directed by Gil Portes; “The Medium”, by Romy V. Suzara; and Edgardo Boy Vinarao’s “Bacao” .