Production Concept
“HAYUMA” is an independently-produced motion picture both for local and international theatrical exhibition. With approximately 90-minutes running time, it is a full-length feature movie within the documentary-drama film genre. For audiences in other parts of the globe, the films is sub-titled DRAGNET.
Set in the
rustic milieu of a poverty-stricken coastal village, the film is a tapestry of
vivid images in motion, depicting disparate facets of rural fisher folk life, a
haunting audio-visual exposé of the systemic socio-cultural and
politico-economic exploitation and oppression of one social class by another.
The story revolves around a deaf mute single mother – “LOLITA” - who, despite gracefully passing through mid-age, still exudes exotic charm that conceals an origin and ancestry virtually anonymous to the local folks. Also known in the village as PIPE, Lolita’s journey departs from being a besieged widow desperately persevering to find her fisherman husband “ARTURO” who, one dark rainy night, sailed out to fish in the sea and never came back.
Storyline
Lolita’s story progresses through what seems like an eternal search for her husband while enduring the agony of the day-to-day effort to keep intact the bodies and souls of six children suddenly orphaned by the sea. Amidst the backdrop of a poverty-stricken fishing village submerged in utter privation and populated by people stagnated in wretched decadence, she struggles to survive in a manner any defenseless prey would in a jungle teeming with predators.
In the midst of
public ridicule and abuse aimed at her physical disability and the malicious
rumors about clandestine affairs she is alleged to have had or is having with a
number of men in the village, Lolita strives to eke out a living for her
children and herself. At times, she breaks even with the social injustice that
she perceives to be a collective scheme to perpetually torment her. In most
times, sadly enough, she ends up beaten and battered by undue violence
complexed by utter deprivation.
Under the shadows of people with a set of outdated moral standards, Lolita is lured into the ocean of psychical influence of acute ignorance and malignant backwardness, the same deep sea as rough as what the fisherfolk believe to have drowned, the father of her children and other half of her life.
Under the shadows of people with a set of outdated moral standards, Lolita is lured into the ocean of psychical influence of acute ignorance and malignant backwardness, the same deep sea as rough as what the fisherfolk believe to have drowned, the father of her children and other half of her life.
Despite its thorns, Lolita
nevertheless persists in trekking the difficult roads traversing San Antonio,
the village she learns both to hate and to love, the only place she believes here
she can pursue the task of picking up the pieces to make her family whole
again. At the brink of giving up all hopes of one day finding her husband
somewhere in her blurry dreams, alive and well, she starts mending the meshes
of her husband’s fishing net torn by whatever took Arturo and left behind as
the only mute witness to his banishment.
Mutely mumbling the thundering chants of mantras that echoes in the inmost sanctum of eternal silence inflicted on her by a war-torn childhood, Lolita loses herself deep in the rituals of hayuma. And as if in a trance, numb and ambivalent to her children and to the oppressive mob that time and again stalks her and her children, Lolita weaves the supple twine into intricate meshes, but never gets to finish repairing her husband’s dragnet.
Mutely mumbling the thundering chants of mantras that echoes in the inmost sanctum of eternal silence inflicted on her by a war-torn childhood, Lolita loses herself deep in the rituals of hayuma. And as if in a trance, numb and ambivalent to her children and to the oppressive mob that time and again stalks her and her children, Lolita weaves the supple twine into intricate meshes, but never gets to finish repairing her husband’s dragnet.
Amidst the backdrop of a poverty-stricken fishing village submerged in utter privation and populated by people stagnated in wretched decadence, she struggles to survive in a manner any defenseless prey would in a jungle teeming with predators.
In the dimmer
corners of the village, Lolita falls prey not just once to dreadful predators
lurking at the ebb of her despair. However, beyond the haunting ruthlessness
inflicted by her loss, her physical disability and the prevalent prejudice
hovering above her physical handicap, the depth of the wounds she daringly
endures accentuates the downright sorrow possessing her. Unknowingly, albeit
fleeting, the exquisite naiveté she exudes brings sympathy from kindred souls,
until the innate charm hitherto concealed by scars of grief pulls closer
unanticipated affections she at first distances herself from but soon embraces
in absolute surrender.
Lolita’s story
is underscored, notwithstanding the complexity of the challenges she needs to
face, by the perceived need to send her children to school despite her family’s
destitution. Unable to understand the need to be forced daily to mingle with
fellow children who never let a day without bombarding them with mockery, scorn
and physical violence, her children, one after the other, begin to lose
interest in attending classes, something she fervently disagrees to the point
of forcing them to go to school.
Fully grasping
the more important compulsion to help their mother earn a living, Lolita’s
children are lured to shady money-making activities, eventually enticing them
into a dragnet that they later realized as a trap but rather too late. Like
what happened to the father they lost too soon early in their childhood, the
children she inadvertently laid open to a situation almost similar to what she
was forced to undergo through in her childhood were snatched out of Lolita’s
life, apparently by monsters similar to what took her husband away.
Terrified at
having to go through the same horror she underwent when she was widowed, she
wasted no time trekking the same rough road all over again to find her children
before time and chances run out. Against all odds, Lolita succeeds in finding
all but one of her lost children.
Until one fateful day,
she was led by the same mob who beleaguered her, to a place where she found her
missing daughter, lifeless and decaying in the same spot where her husband’s
torn fishing net was found three days after he disappeared.
Lolita’s story
ends in her realization of the real reason of her husband’s disappearance, her
internal conflict of surrender and resistance as tragedy after tragedy struck
her family and community, and her final acceptance of the social realities that
brought about her fate that she finally decides to confront and bravely defy in
resolute final steps to culminate her journey through the rough road to
emancipation.
Cast of Characters
The cast of characters for the movie are reputable movie, television and theater actors who possess dependable reputation both locally and internationally.
Marife Necesito |
The lead role will be portrayed international actress MARIFE NECESITO who played opposite Hollywood actor Gael Garcia Bernal in “Mammoth”, a movie by acclaimed Swedish director Lukas Moodysson. She also possesses a massive artistic body of works as an actress in theater, television and motion pictures and a wide array of experiences as a TV commercial model.
Angie Ferro |
In the cast, among others, are award-winning veteran film, theater and television actress ANGIE FERRO, theater actor JOEM BASCON and beauty queen turned movie and television actress MARIA ISABEL LOPEZ.
The film project is being created under the screenplay and direction of MURPHY RED, author, TV drama writer, playwright and film critic who won grand prize awards in several national-level literary competitions. He was the writer of the full-feature film “Haw-ang” (Before Harvest) and played significant roles in various film production and theater projects in recent years.
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