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Wikipedia

Itim

Itim (Filipino for "black"[1]), released overseas as The Rites of May,[1] is a 1976 Filipino thriller film and the directorial debut of Mike de Leon, with a screenplay by Clodualdo del Mundo Jr. and Gil Quito. The film stars Tommy Abuel as a young photographer visiting his father, played by Mario Montenegro, in his provincial town during the Lenten season. There he encounters a mysterious woman, Teresa, played by Charo Santos in her acting debut.

Itim
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMike de Leon
Written by
Produced by
  • Severino Manotok Jr.
  • Ma. Teresa L. Manotok
  • Ruben T. del Rosario
Starring
Cinematography
  • Rody Lacap
  • Ely Cruz
Edited byIke Jarlego Jr.
Music byMax Jocson
Production
company
Cinema Artists Philippines
Running time
105 minutes
CountryPhilippines
LanguageFilipino

The Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino (Filipino Film Critics) included the film on their list of the Ten Best Films of the Decade. In 2022, the film was digitally restored, with a subsequent theatrical premiere as part of the Cannes Classics section at the 75th Cannes Film Festival.[2]

Plot edit

The film opens on a séance where an espiritista exclaims that Rosa (Susan Valdez), a missing Catholic nun, is dead. Her younger sister, Teresa (Charo Santos), is uneasy. Their mother asks the espiritista if she can speak to Rosa. The espiritista tells her to wait for Good Friday.

Meanwhile, Jun (Tommy Abuel), a young photographer from Manila, is visiting his mute and wheelchair-bound-father, Dr. Torres (Mario Montenegro), in their provincial hometown during Holy Week. Throughout his visit, Jun photographs various Lenten rituals for the Manila-based magazine he works for.

He comes across Teresa and takes her photograph while she is dazed. Following this are several chance encounters where she exhibits strange behaviors she does not seem to have control over. Soon, however, they discover that it was not chance but the supernatural that brought them together. In the clinic of his father, Jun finds a film negative; he develops it and sees it is a photo of his father and a young woman, who he soon learns is Rosa.

It is revealed in another séance that the spirit of Rosa possesses Teresa. Rosa's spirit lets out that she was having an affair with Dr. Torres, who forced her to have an abortion, resulting in her death. Soon after the incident, Dr. Torres figured in a car accident that left him mute and paralyzed. After revealing what happened, Rosa exacts her revenge, causing Dr. Torres to fall down the stairs and die.

Cast edit

Production edit

Development edit

I got interested in doing a film that used a camera to tell a story with one character, no dialogue and just sound effects. One thing I liked about Blow-up was the idea of existential alienation. Monologo was a ghost story. The character takes photos and he does not realize that he has photographed a ghost or a presence in his own house. I mean, his camera saw it but he did not. That kinda blew my mind.

– Mike de Leon in a 2022 interview[3]

Originally a cinematographer, Mike de Leon was known for his award-winning work on the 1975 film Manila in the Claws of Light, which was directed by Lino Brocka.[4] Although de Leon did not initially set out to become a director, following Manila, he made the short film Monologo (Monologue). This would serve as a turning point, the experience piquing his interest in directing. Brocka, who de Leon worked with in Manila, was the first person to view the rough cut of Monologo. He subsequently encouraged de Leon to pursue directing.[5] De Leon has described Itim as an offshoot of Monologo, which was a ghost story and homage to Michelangelo Antonioni's 1966 thriller Blow-up. De Leon said he was also inspired by the ghost stories of Lafcadio Hearn.[3][6]

The script was written by Clodualdo del Mundo Jr., who wrote the script of Manila, and del Mundo's brother-in-law, Gil Quito.[7] Quito conceived of setting the film during Holy Week and incorporating spiritualism.[8] He recalled that the script was written with relative ease, except for the ending. Spiritist Becky Gutierrez was on set as a consultant for the psychic-related elements of the film. She wrote down the incantations from her actual séances for the production team, which were then used to inform the final scene.[3] De Leon also credits production designer Mel Chionglo for assistance in re-writing the séance scene.[9] According to de Leon, screenwriter Ricky Lee initially worked on the script but requested not to be credited. The director believed Lee, known then as a former student activist, made the request due to the lack of overt social relevance in Itim.[7]

Casting edit

Initially, de Leon was interested in casting big-name actors, as was the convention at the time.[3] The original idea was an erotic thriller with Alma Moreno and Bembol Roco, the latter of whom starred in Brocka's Manila. According to de Leon, after Manila, Roco committed to appear in de Leon's directorial debut but had a schedule conflict with another film he had already signed on to act in. Regarding Moreno, the director was put off when her manager demanded there be full payment upon signing the contract. Following these setbacks, de Leon asked for Brocka's assistance in casting Hilda Koronel, but her fee was beyond their budget.[10] As a result, the production was risked on newcomers, including Charo Santos and Susan Valdez.[3]

 
Charo Santos in 2014. She made her acting debut in the 1977 film Itim directed by Mike de Leon. Santos would also star in de Leon's Kakabakaba Ka Ba? and Kisapmata.

After winning the Baron Travel Girl beauty pageant, Santos, then a college student, was noticed by Brocka. Brocka referred Santos to de Leon and a screen test was arranged. Following the screen test, Santos was offered her first acting role with Itim.[11][12] As Santos refused to do any erotic scenes, or even to kiss on screen, de Leon scrapped the original concept of an erotic thriller and instead delved into Catholic guilt through the lens of the horror genre.[7]

The film also served as the acting debut of Susan Valdez, albeit in a non-speaking role; prior to the film, Valdez was known as a commercial model. The main role of the photographer was given to Tommy Abuel, who de Leon worked with on Manila. Meanwhile, the more seasoned Mario Montenegro and Mona Lisa were cast due to de Leon's familiarity with them as actors of LVN Pictures, which was formerly run by de Leon's grandmother Narcisa de Leon.[5] De Leon admitted that Montenegro was his favorite of the LVN actors due to his costume films, particularly a childhood favorite, the 1954 feature Prinsipe Teñoso.[8]

De Leon recalled approaching Rolando Tinio, his former teacher, to discuss whether his wife, actress Ella Luansing, would play the espiritista in the film. However, Tinio turned the discussion instead into a criticism of Manila.[13] The role eventually went to Sarah Joaquin.[2]

Filming edit

Principal photography commenced at the ancestral home of de Leon in San Miguel, Bulacan over the course of two months in 1976.[5][8] Since it was his family's home, de Leon took liberties with the set production, including removing walls and moving old furniture around, much to the displeasure of his father when he visited the set.[14]

Itim is regarded as the first major production design work of Chionglo, who would later go on to be a respected director in his own right, best known for the trilogy consisting of Sibak, Burlesk King, and Twilight Dancers.[15] On the set of Itim, Chionglo was also assigned to assist newcomer Santos as her acting coach.[5]

The film also served as the first cinematography work of Rody Lacap, a former color grader and optical print operator at LVN Pictures. Lacap had first been hired by de Leon as a gaffer and lighting director for his short film Monologo. He would go on to be the cinematographer of several of de Leon's other films, including Kakabakaba Ka Ba?, Kisapmata, Batch '81, and Sister Stella L., as well as Peque Gallaga's Oro, Plata, Mata and Marilou Diaz-Abaya's José Rizal.[16] Lacap was co-cinematographer with Ely Cruz, who also worked with de Leon on Monologo, and would go on to photograph Peque Gallaga's Scorpio Nights, among others.[17]

Santos described de Leon on set as seeing "a genius in action" adding, "He storyboarded the entire movie in his head, even before the first shot. He expects perfection from everyone." There were similar recollections by actor Valdez, recalling, "Meticulous in preparing a shot. He was particular about how the lighting was set up. Lengthy waiting time when he sets up the lights which shows how much of a consummate director he was." The more experienced Tommy Abuel recalled similarly that de Leon "was mainly concerned with the technical aspects of the film such as camera angles, shots, lighting, etc." De Leon himself admitted he is not an actor's director, but rather treated film acting as an element of the overall film.[5]

Post-production edit

In order to achieve a bleak and moody atmosphere, de Leon used various post-production techniques that imagined the cinematography's darkness as a protagonist, including exposing the negatives twice. A tricky procedure, several negatives were ruined in the process, requiring the re-shooting of the respective scenes.[18] The film was scored by Max Jocson, who worked with de Leon on Manila. For several scenes of Itim, Jocson scored "against picture" by having live musicians play the score while the film was being projected in real-time.[19]

Themes and allusions edit

Catholicism and Folk Catholic imaginary edit

The film is set during Holy Week, which film academic Bliss Cua Lim describes as "a season in which the mundane time of everyday life intersects with a biblical temporality of sin, repentance, and redemption."[20] The final scene occurs during Good Friday, which Lim suggests means the story falls short of the redemption symbolized by Easter Sunday and thus "closes on the darkness of death, remorse, and frailty named in its title."[21]

There are several allusions to Catholic rites, devotions, and images, including the uninterrupted chanting of the Pasyon;[22] a veiled statue of the Virgin Mary;[23] and a group of twelve life-size saint statues representing the twelve apostles of Jesus Christ.[24] These allusions, theologist Antonio Sison contends, are presented through the lens of "folk Catholic imaginary" that blends images of Catholicism with the Filipino primal religion.[25] As such, the séances depicted are not part of Catholic belief but "occupies a niche in folk Catholic practice, which does not take issue with religious syncretism." This distinguishes the séance in Itim from scenes in similar films of the horror genre, as in Itim there is seriousness in the séances' religious legitimacy.[26]

The character of Jun, the young photographer, first encounters the apostle statues when he takes photos of them as several women chant the Pasyon. The statues then appear to Jun in a dream. They surround him and then suddenly begin moving towards and circling him, alerting Jun to the heinous deed committed by his father. Sison comments, "The folk Catholic imagery recognizes the divine intervention of religious images who will use dreamscape as a means to interrupt sinful patterns in the characters' lives and make metanoia a possibility, or, at least, a promise."[27]

Release edit

Initially released in 1976, it was made commercially available in the Philippines in 1977.[28] The film was internationally screened for the first time in 1979 at Filmex in Los Angeles.[29]

Restoration edit

Although the Asian Film Archive offered to fund the digital restoration of Itim, delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic led director Mike de Leon to fund the restoration himself. The restoration was done by L'Immagine Ritrovata, the same film lab de Leon worked with for the restoration of his films Batch '81 and Kisapmata, as well as for the restoration of Manila in the Claws of Light.[30] The restoration used the original negatives, which had been stored at the British Film Institute since the 1970s.[5]

On May 20, 2022, the restored version premiered at the 75th Cannes Film Festival as part of the Cannes Classics section. It was personally introduced by Cannes Delegate General Thierry Frémaux.[30][29] The restored version had its Philippine premiere at the 10th QCinema International Film Festival.[12]

In November that same year, the restored film was included in the "Mike De Leon, Self-Portrait of a Filipino Filmmaker" retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. It was screened alongside screenwriter Clodualdo del Mundo's behind-the-scenes documentary Itim: An Exploration in Cinema.[8] The following month, Itim was shown in another retrospective, "Mike de Leon: A Life in (Moving) Pictures," at the Three Continents Festival in Nantes, France.[31][32]

Home media edit

In March 2023, Itim was released on Blu-ray Disc by Carlotta Films as part of a five-box set of select films directed by de Leon.[33][34]

Reception edit

Box office edit

Itim was a commercial flop upon its initial theatrical release, running for only one week.[4]

Critical response edit

The film received a positive response from Filipino critics. Pio de Castro III lauded Itim in a contemporary Times Journal review, writing that the film was enigmatic, technically excellent, and "the touchstone against which all other films of 1977 will be gauged."[4] The Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino (Filipino Film Critics) included the film on their list of the Ten Best Films of the '70s.[2]

Accolades edit

At the 1978 Asian Film Festival, Itim was awarded Best Picture, and Charo Santos was recognized as Best Actress.[2] Mike de Leon's sophomore feature, Kung Mangarap Ka't Magising, as well as Eddie Romero's Ganito Kami Noon... Paano Kayo Ngayon? were also festival entries. De Leon's father, producer Manuel de Leon (although not a producer of Itim), accepted the award for Best Picture on his son's behalf. In 1956, the film Child of Sorrow, produced by Manuel de Leon, had received the same honor.[35]

Itim also received four Gawad Urian awards: Best Cinematography, Best Music, Best Editing, and Best Sound.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Vibal & Villegas 2020, p. 371.
  2. ^ a b c d e Sicat, Luna; Gatchalian, Elmer (2022) [1994]. "Itim". Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art. Cultural Center of the Philippines.
  3. ^ a b c d e Pavan, Benoit (March 19, 2022). . Cannes Film Festival. Archived from the original on April 6, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Campos 2006, p. 39.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Napales, Ruben (May 11, 2022). "[Only IN Hollywood] Mike de Leon on 'Itim' premiering in Cannes almost 50 years later". Rappler. from the original on March 21, 2023.
  6. ^ Sison 2019, p. 41.
  7. ^ a b c De Leon 2022, p. 116.
  8. ^ a b c d n.a. (November 12, 2022). "Itim (The Rites of May). 1976. Directed by Mike De Leon Itim: Isang Eksplorasyon sa Pelikula (Itim: An Exploration in Cinema). 1976. Directed by Clodualdo del Mundo, Jr". Museum of Modern Art. from the original on October 26, 2022.
  9. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 117.
  10. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 112–113.
  11. ^ Ang, Raymond (October 1, 2016). "Charo, reborn". Phil Star SUPREME. The Philippine Star. from the original on December 22, 2021. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  12. ^ a b n.a. (November 16, 2022). "Digitally-restored Mike de Leon's film classic 'Itim' starring Charo Santos, to screen at 10th QCinema Int'l Film Festival". Manila Bulletin Online. Manila Bulletin. from the original on April 14, 2023.
  13. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 161.
  14. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 119–121.
  15. ^ Vibal & Villegas 2020, p. 354.
  16. ^ Galang, Rosalind; Sangil, Anne Francis (n.d.). "Lacap, Rody". Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art. Cultural Center of the Philippines.
  17. ^ Matilac, Rosalie; Almanzor, Sylvelyn Jo (n.d.). "Cruz, Ely". Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art. Cultural Center of the Philippines.
  18. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 125–126.
  19. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 126.
  20. ^ Cua Lim 2009, p. 2.
  21. ^ Cua Lim 2009, p. 4.
  22. ^ Sison 2019, p. 39.
  23. ^ Sison 2019, p. 42.
  24. ^ Sison 2019, p. 43.
  25. ^ Sison 2019, p. 44.
  26. ^ Sison 2019, p. 46.
  27. ^ Sison 2016, p. 437.
  28. ^ Campos 2006, p. 38.
  29. ^ a b Ng, Scott (May 23, 2022). "'Itim' director Mike De Leon says he's "utterly humiliated to be a Filipino" following Bongbong Marcos election win". NME.com. BandLab Technologies. from the original on November 22, 2022.
  30. ^ a b Hunt, A.E. (June 9, 2022). "EXCLUSIVE: Mike De Leon on the newly restored 'Itim'". CNN Philippines Life. Nine Media Corporation. from the original on March 15, 2023.
  31. ^ De Jesus, Totel (October 31, 2022). "Mike de Leon first PH filmmaker to have a retrospective at New York's MoMA". Inquirer.NET. Inquirer Group of Companies. from the original on November 10, 2022.
  32. ^ n.a. (n.d.). "MIKE DE LEON: A LIFE IN (MOVING) PICTURES". Festival des 3 Continents. from the original on April 23, 2023.
  33. ^ De Jesus, Totel (March 21, 2023). "Mike de Leon tribute at UP with film screenings, launch of Blu-ray boxset". ABS-CBNnews.com. ABS-CBN Corporation. from the original on April 13, 2023.
  34. ^ n.a. (n.d.). "Mike De Leon, portrait of a Filipino filmmaker - 8 films". Carlotta Films. from the original on March 21, 2023.
  35. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 130–131.

Bibliography edit

  • Campos, Patrick (2006). "Looming Over the Nation, Uneasy with the Folks: Locating Mike de Leon in Philippine Cinema". Humanities Diliman: A Journal on Philippine Humanities. University of the Philippines. 3 (2): 35–73. eISSN 2012-0788. ISSN 1655-1532.
  • Cua Lim, Bliss (2009). "Introduction: Clocks for Seeing: Cinema, the Fantastic, and the Critique of Homogeneous Time". Translating Time: Cinema, the Fantastic, and Temporal Critique. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. pp. 1–41. doi:10.1215/9780822390992. ISBN 978-082-23-9099-2.
  • De Leon, Mike (2022). Campos, Patrick (ed.). Last Look Back. Quezon City: Contra Mundum Publishing. ISBN 978-621-06-0080-3.
  • Sison, Antonio (2016). "Afflictive Apparitions: The Folk Catholic Imaginary in Philippine Cinema". Material Religion: The Journal of Objects, Art and Belief. Taylor & Francis. 11 (4): 421–442. doi:10.1080/17432200.2015.1103474. eISSN 1751-8342. ISSN 1743-2200. S2CID 192961308.
  • Sison, Antonio (2019). Campos, Patrick (ed.). (PDF). Situations: Cultural Studies in the Asian Context. Yonsei University. 12 (1): 33–52. eISSN 2288-1204. ISSN 2288-7822. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 22, 2023.
  • Vibal, Gaspar; Villegas, Dennis (2020). Co, Teddy (ed.). Philippine Cinema, 1897–2020. Quezon City: Vibal Foundation. ISBN 978-971-97-0717-2.

External links edit

itim, filipino, black, released, overseas, rites, 1976, filipino, thriller, film, directorial, debut, mike, leon, with, screenplay, clodualdo, mundo, quito, film, stars, tommy, abuel, young, photographer, visiting, father, played, mario, montenegro, provincial. Itim Filipino for black 1 released overseas as The Rites of May 1 is a 1976 Filipino thriller film and the directorial debut of Mike de Leon with a screenplay by Clodualdo del Mundo Jr and Gil Quito The film stars Tommy Abuel as a young photographer visiting his father played by Mario Montenegro in his provincial town during the Lenten season There he encounters a mysterious woman Teresa played by Charo Santos in her acting debut ItimTheatrical release posterDirected byMike de LeonWritten byClodualdo del Mundo Jr Gil QuitoProduced bySeverino Manotok Jr Ma Teresa L Manotok Ruben T del RosarioStarringTommy Abuel Mario Montenegro Charo SantosCinematographyRody Lacap Ely CruzEdited byIke Jarlego Jr Music byMax JocsonProductioncompanyCinema Artists PhilippinesRunning time105 minutesCountryPhilippinesLanguageFilipinoThe Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino Filipino Film Critics included the film on their list of the Ten Best Films of the Decade In 2022 the film was digitally restored with a subsequent theatrical premiere as part of the Cannes Classics section at the 75th Cannes Film Festival 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 3 4 Post production 4 Themes and allusions 4 1 Catholicism and Folk Catholic imaginary 5 Release 5 1 Restoration 5 2 Home media 6 Reception 6 1 Box office 6 2 Critical response 6 3 Accolades 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksPlot editThe film opens on a seance where an espiritista exclaims that Rosa Susan Valdez a missing Catholic nun is dead Her younger sister Teresa Charo Santos is uneasy Their mother asks the espiritista if she can speak to Rosa The espiritista tells her to wait for Good Friday Meanwhile Jun Tommy Abuel a young photographer from Manila is visiting his mute and wheelchair bound father Dr Torres Mario Montenegro in their provincial hometown during Holy Week Throughout his visit Jun photographs various Lenten rituals for the Manila based magazine he works for He comes across Teresa and takes her photograph while she is dazed Following this are several chance encounters where she exhibits strange behaviors she does not seem to have control over Soon however they discover that it was not chance but the supernatural that brought them together In the clinic of his father Jun finds a film negative he develops it and sees it is a photo of his father and a young woman who he soon learns is Rosa It is revealed in another seance that the spirit of Rosa possesses Teresa Rosa s spirit lets out that she was having an affair with Dr Torres who forced her to have an abortion resulting in her death Soon after the incident Dr Torres figured in a car accident that left him mute and paralyzed After revealing what happened Rosa exacts her revenge causing Dr Torres to fall down the stairs and die Cast editTommy Abuel as Jun Mario Montenegro as Dr Torres Mona Lisa as Aling Pining Charo Santos as Teresa Sarah Joaquin as Aling Angelina Susan Valdez as Rosa Moody Diaz as Aling BebengProduction editDevelopment edit I got interested in doing a film that used a camera to tell a story with one character no dialogue and just sound effects One thing I liked about Blow up was the idea of existential alienation Monologo was a ghost story The character takes photos and he does not realize that he has photographed a ghost or a presence in his own house I mean his camera saw it but he did not That kinda blew my mind Mike de Leon in a 2022 interview 3 Originally a cinematographer Mike de Leon was known for his award winning work on the 1975 film Manila in the Claws of Light which was directed by Lino Brocka 4 Although de Leon did not initially set out to become a director following Manila he made the short film Monologo Monologue This would serve as a turning point the experience piquing his interest in directing Brocka who de Leon worked with in Manila was the first person to view the rough cut of Monologo He subsequently encouraged de Leon to pursue directing 5 De Leon has described Itim as an offshoot of Monologo which was a ghost story and homage to Michelangelo Antonioni s 1966 thriller Blow up De Leon said he was also inspired by the ghost stories of Lafcadio Hearn 3 6 The script was written by Clodualdo del Mundo Jr who wrote the script of Manila and del Mundo s brother in law Gil Quito 7 Quito conceived of setting the film during Holy Week and incorporating spiritualism 8 He recalled that the script was written with relative ease except for the ending Spiritist Becky Gutierrez was on set as a consultant for the psychic related elements of the film She wrote down the incantations from her actual seances for the production team which were then used to inform the final scene 3 De Leon also credits production designer Mel Chionglo for assistance in re writing the seance scene 9 According to de Leon screenwriter Ricky Lee initially worked on the script but requested not to be credited The director believed Lee known then as a former student activist made the request due to the lack of overt social relevance in Itim 7 Casting edit Initially de Leon was interested in casting big name actors as was the convention at the time 3 The original idea was an erotic thriller with Alma Moreno and Bembol Roco the latter of whom starred in Brocka s Manila According to de Leon after Manila Roco committed to appear in de Leon s directorial debut but had a schedule conflict with another film he had already signed on to act in Regarding Moreno the director was put off when her manager demanded there be full payment upon signing the contract Following these setbacks de Leon asked for Brocka s assistance in casting Hilda Koronel but her fee was beyond their budget 10 As a result the production was risked on newcomers including Charo Santos and Susan Valdez 3 nbsp Charo Santos in 2014 She made her acting debut in the 1977 film Itim directed by Mike de Leon Santos would also star in de Leon s Kakabakaba Ka Ba and Kisapmata After winning the Baron Travel Girl beauty pageant Santos then a college student was noticed by Brocka Brocka referred Santos to de Leon and a screen test was arranged Following the screen test Santos was offered her first acting role with Itim 11 12 As Santos refused to do any erotic scenes or even to kiss on screen de Leon scrapped the original concept of an erotic thriller and instead delved into Catholic guilt through the lens of the horror genre 7 The film also served as the acting debut of Susan Valdez albeit in a non speaking role prior to the film Valdez was known as a commercial model The main role of the photographer was given to Tommy Abuel who de Leon worked with on Manila Meanwhile the more seasoned Mario Montenegro and Mona Lisa were cast due to de Leon s familiarity with them as actors of LVN Pictures which was formerly run by de Leon s grandmother Narcisa de Leon 5 De Leon admitted that Montenegro was his favorite of the LVN actors due to his costume films particularly a childhood favorite the 1954 feature Prinsipe Tenoso 8 De Leon recalled approaching Rolando Tinio his former teacher to discuss whether his wife actress Ella Luansing would play the espiritista in the film However Tinio turned the discussion instead into a criticism of Manila 13 The role eventually went to Sarah Joaquin 2 Filming edit Principal photography commenced at the ancestral home of de Leon in San Miguel Bulacan over the course of two months in 1976 5 8 Since it was his family s home de Leon took liberties with the set production including removing walls and moving old furniture around much to the displeasure of his father when he visited the set 14 Itim is regarded as the first major production design work of Chionglo who would later go on to be a respected director in his own right best known for the trilogy consisting of Sibak Burlesk King and Twilight Dancers 15 On the set of Itim Chionglo was also assigned to assist newcomer Santos as her acting coach 5 The film also served as the first cinematography work of Rody Lacap a former color grader and optical print operator at LVN Pictures Lacap had first been hired by de Leon as a gaffer and lighting director for his short film Monologo He would go on to be the cinematographer of several of de Leon s other films including Kakabakaba Ka Ba Kisapmata Batch 81 and Sister Stella L as well as Peque Gallaga s Oro Plata Mata and Marilou Diaz Abaya s Jose Rizal 16 Lacap was co cinematographer with Ely Cruz who also worked with de Leon on Monologo and would go on to photograph Peque Gallaga s Scorpio Nights among others 17 Santos described de Leon on set as seeing a genius in action adding He storyboarded the entire movie in his head even before the first shot He expects perfection from everyone There were similar recollections by actor Valdez recalling Meticulous in preparing a shot He was particular about how the lighting was set up Lengthy waiting time when he sets up the lights which shows how much of a consummate director he was The more experienced Tommy Abuel recalled similarly that de Leon was mainly concerned with the technical aspects of the film such as camera angles shots lighting etc De Leon himself admitted he is not an actor s director but rather treated film acting as an element of the overall film 5 Post production edit In order to achieve a bleak and moody atmosphere de Leon used various post production techniques that imagined the cinematography s darkness as a protagonist including exposing the negatives twice A tricky procedure several negatives were ruined in the process requiring the re shooting of the respective scenes 18 The film was scored by Max Jocson who worked with de Leon on Manila For several scenes of Itim Jocson scored against picture by having live musicians play the score while the film was being projected in real time 19 Themes and allusions editCatholicism and Folk Catholic imaginary edit The film is set during Holy Week which film academic Bliss Cua Lim describes as a season in which the mundane time of everyday life intersects with a biblical temporality of sin repentance and redemption 20 The final scene occurs during Good Friday which Lim suggests means the story falls short of the redemption symbolized by Easter Sunday and thus closes on the darkness of death remorse and frailty named in its title 21 There are several allusions to Catholic rites devotions and images including the uninterrupted chanting of the Pasyon 22 a veiled statue of the Virgin Mary 23 and a group of twelve life size saint statues representing the twelve apostles of Jesus Christ 24 These allusions theologist Antonio Sison contends are presented through the lens of folk Catholic imaginary that blends images of Catholicism with the Filipino primal religion 25 As such the seances depicted are not part of Catholic belief but occupies a niche in folk Catholic practice which does not take issue with religious syncretism This distinguishes the seance in Itim from scenes in similar films of the horror genre as in Itim there is seriousness in the seances religious legitimacy 26 The character of Jun the young photographer first encounters the apostle statues when he takes photos of them as several women chant the Pasyon The statues then appear to Jun in a dream They surround him and then suddenly begin moving towards and circling him alerting Jun to the heinous deed committed by his father Sison comments The folk Catholic imagery recognizes the divine intervention of religious images who will use dreamscape as a means to interrupt sinful patterns in the characters lives and make metanoia a possibility or at least a promise 27 Release editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2023 Initially released in 1976 it was made commercially available in the Philippines in 1977 28 The film was internationally screened for the first time in 1979 at Filmex in Los Angeles 29 Restoration edit Although the Asian Film Archive offered to fund the digital restoration of Itim delays due to the COVID 19 pandemic led director Mike de Leon to fund the restoration himself The restoration was done by L Immagine Ritrovata the same film lab de Leon worked with for the restoration of his films Batch 81 and Kisapmata as well as for the restoration of Manila in the Claws of Light 30 The restoration used the original negatives which had been stored at the British Film Institute since the 1970s 5 On May 20 2022 the restored version premiered at the 75th Cannes Film Festival as part of the Cannes Classics section It was personally introduced by Cannes Delegate General Thierry Fremaux 30 29 The restored version had its Philippine premiere at the 10th QCinema International Film Festival 12 In November that same year the restored film was included in the Mike De Leon Self Portrait of a Filipino Filmmaker retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City It was screened alongside screenwriter Clodualdo del Mundo s behind the scenes documentary Itim An Exploration in Cinema 8 The following month Itim was shown in another retrospective Mike de Leon A Life in Moving Pictures at the Three Continents Festival in Nantes France 31 32 Home media edit In March 2023 Itim was released on Blu ray Disc by Carlotta Films as part of a five box set of select films directed by de Leon 33 34 Reception editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2023 Box office edit Itim was a commercial flop upon its initial theatrical release running for only one week 4 Critical response edit The film received a positive response from Filipino critics Pio de Castro III lauded Itim in a contemporary Times Journal review writing that the film was enigmatic technically excellent and the touchstone against which all other films of 1977 will be gauged 4 The Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino Filipino Film Critics included the film on their list of the Ten Best Films of the 70s 2 Accolades edit At the 1978 Asian Film Festival Itim was awarded Best Picture and Charo Santos was recognized as Best Actress 2 Mike de Leon s sophomore feature Kung Mangarap Ka t Magising as well as Eddie Romero s Ganito Kami Noon Paano Kayo Ngayon were also festival entries De Leon s father producer Manuel de Leon although not a producer of Itim accepted the award for Best Picture on his son s behalf In 1956 the film Child of Sorrow produced by Manuel de Leon had received the same honor 35 Itim also received four Gawad Urian awards Best Cinematography Best Music Best Editing and Best Sound 2 References edit a b Vibal amp Villegas 2020 p 371 a b c d e Sicat Luna Gatchalian Elmer 2022 1994 Itim Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art Cultural Center of the Philippines a b c d e Pavan Benoit March 19 2022 Itim Mike De Leon s esoteric and oppressive deep dive Cannes Film Festival Archived from the original on April 6 2023 a b c Campos 2006 p 39 a b c d e f Napales Ruben May 11 2022 Only IN Hollywood Mike de Leon on Itim premiering in Cannes almost 50 years later Rappler Archived from the original on March 21 2023 Sison 2019 p 41 a b c De Leon 2022 p 116 a b c d n a November 12 2022 Itim The Rites of May 1976 Directed by Mike De Leon Itim Isang Eksplorasyon sa Pelikula Itim An Exploration in Cinema 1976 Directed by Clodualdo del Mundo Jr Museum of Modern Art Archived from the original on October 26 2022 De Leon 2022 p 117 De Leon 2022 p 112 113 Ang Raymond October 1 2016 Charo reborn Phil Star SUPREME The Philippine Star Archived from the original on December 22 2021 Retrieved April 20 2023 a b n a November 16 2022 Digitally restored Mike de Leon s film classic Itim starring Charo Santos to screen at 10th QCinema Int l Film Festival Manila Bulletin Online Manila Bulletin Archived from the original on April 14 2023 De Leon 2022 p 161 De Leon 2022 p 119 121 Vibal amp Villegas 2020 p 354 Galang Rosalind Sangil Anne Francis n d Lacap Rody Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art Cultural Center of the Philippines Matilac Rosalie Almanzor Sylvelyn Jo n d Cruz Ely Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art Cultural Center of the Philippines De Leon 2022 p 125 126 De Leon 2022 p 126 Cua Lim 2009 p 2 Cua Lim 2009 p 4 Sison 2019 p 39 Sison 2019 p 42 Sison 2019 p 43 Sison 2019 p 44 Sison 2019 p 46 Sison 2016 p 437 Campos 2006 p 38 a b Ng Scott May 23 2022 Itim director Mike De Leon says he s utterly humiliated to be a Filipino following Bongbong Marcos election win NME com BandLab Technologies Archived from the original on November 22 2022 a b Hunt A E June 9 2022 EXCLUSIVE Mike De Leon on the newly restored Itim CNN Philippines Life Nine Media Corporation Archived from the original on March 15 2023 De Jesus Totel October 31 2022 Mike de Leon first PH filmmaker to have a retrospective at New York s MoMA Inquirer NET Inquirer Group of Companies Archived from the original on November 10 2022 n a n d MIKE DE LEON A LIFE IN MOVING PICTURES Festival des 3 Continents Archived from the original on April 23 2023 De Jesus Totel March 21 2023 Mike de Leon tribute at UP with film screenings launch of Blu ray boxset ABS CBNnews com ABS CBN Corporation Archived from the original on April 13 2023 n a n d Mike De Leon portrait of a Filipino filmmaker 8 films Carlotta Films Archived from the original on March 21 2023 De Leon 2022 p 130 131 Bibliography edit Campos Patrick 2006 Looming Over the Nation Uneasy with the Folks Locating Mike de Leon in Philippine Cinema Humanities Diliman A Journal on Philippine Humanities University of the Philippines 3 2 35 73 eISSN 2012 0788 ISSN 1655 1532 Cua Lim Bliss 2009 Introduction Clocks for Seeing Cinema the Fantastic and the Critique of Homogeneous Time Translating Time Cinema the Fantastic and Temporal Critique Durham North Carolina Duke University Press pp 1 41 doi 10 1215 9780822390992 ISBN 978 082 23 9099 2 De Leon Mike 2022 Campos Patrick ed Last Look Back Quezon City Contra Mundum Publishing ISBN 978 621 06 0080 3 Sison Antonio 2016 Afflictive Apparitions The Folk Catholic Imaginary in Philippine Cinema Material Religion The Journal of Objects Art and Belief Taylor amp Francis 11 4 421 442 doi 10 1080 17432200 2015 1103474 eISSN 1751 8342 ISSN 1743 2200 S2CID 192961308 Sison Antonio 2019 Campos Patrick ed Surrexit She Has Arisen The Rites of May and the Folk Catholic Imaginary PDF Situations Cultural Studies in the Asian Context Yonsei University 12 1 33 52 eISSN 2288 1204 ISSN 2288 7822 Archived from the original PDF on April 22 2023 Vibal Gaspar Villegas Dennis 2020 Co Teddy ed Philippine Cinema 1897 2020 Quezon City Vibal Foundation ISBN 978 971 97 0717 2 External links editItim at AllMovie Itim at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Itim amp oldid 1170505468, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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