Rizal sa Dapitan

Rizal sa Dapitan
Official VHS cover
Directed byTikoy Aguiluz
Screenplay byPete Lacaba
Story by
  • Lualhati Bautista
  • Tikoy Aguiluz
  • Noel Vera
  • Vic Torres
  • Mirana Medina-Bhunjun
  • Kim D. Wabwab
  • Marie Punerama
  • Alexandria D. Magiba
  • Elena Magdangal
  • Michelle Pangilinan
Produced byTikoy Aguiluz
Starring
Cinematography
Edited byMirana Medina-Bhunjun
Music byNonong Buencamino
Production
companies
  • Independent Cinema Association of the Philippines
  • PLDT
  • Movipix International
Distributed by
Release date
  • 1997 (1997)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryPhilippines
Languages
  • Filipino
  • Spanish
  • English

Rizal sa Dapitan (lit.'Rizal in Dapitan') is a 1997 Philippine biographical film directed by Tikoy Aguiluz about the four-year exile of Filipino propagandist and patriot José Rizal in Dapitan, starring Albert Martinez as Rizal and Amanda Page as Josephine Bracken.[1] The screenplay was written by Pete Lacaba.[2]: 54–66 

Plot

José Rizal is exiled to Dapitan in 1892 and begins adapting to his new home. He helps the local residents by offering free education to all children and befriends a student, Jose Asiniero, in the process. He also renders his services as a doctor and treats his mother, Doña Teodora Alonzo, who visits him with his sisters Maria and Narcisa.

In the course of his exile, Rizal meets Josephine Bracken, who accompanies her stepfather George Taufer, who seeks treatment for his blindness. Bracken falls in love with Rizal and eventually moves in with him, leaving Taufer. They decide to marry, but are refused a Church wedding on political grounds. The couple settles for a common-law marriage despite initial opposition from Rizal's family, and have a stillborn son whom Rizal names Francisco. Later, Pio Valenzuela, a representative of the Katipunan, visits him and announces the group's plans to stage a revolution, but Rizal refuses to join them.

The film closes with Rizal leaving Dapitan to volunteer as a doctor in Cuba as the locals mourn him. An epilogue explains Rizal's subsequent arrest, his execution and its birthing the Philippine Revolution.

Cast

Production

Development

Antonio Samson, then the senior vice president of PLDT, came up with the idea of making a film about the time José Rizal was exiled in Dapitan, and brought it to director Tikoy Aguiluz.[3]

Production

The film was shot entirely in the City of Dapitan, Zamboanga del Norte on 16 mm film.[3] Up to June 1997, the film was simply titled Dapitan.[3] Aguiluz originally meant for the film to have a shorter length for release on television, but he eventually decided against it, convincing the producers to let him extend it to feature-length.[3]

Release

Rizal sa Dapitan was an entry of the Manila Film Festival in mid-1997, where it won 12 awards, including the Rajah Sulayman Award for Best Picture.[4] However, it was not commercially successful during its theatrical run.[5] GMA Network, which was producing a different film about Rizal through its own film studio, acquired the television broadcast rights to Rizal sa Dapitan.[5]

The film's international version held its premiere on September 30, 1997, at the Film Center of the University of the Philippines Diliman, with the event billed with the subtitle "Film Gift to the Nation".[4]

It was screened at the Brussels International Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize and the best actor award for Albert Martinez.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Reel Heroes: 10 Actors Who Played Them in Movies". Spot. August 30, 2010. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  2. ^ Israel, Lorna (2011). ""A Body in Permanent Transit. José Rizal's Exile as Spatial Performance"" (PDF). Manycinemas 2: 54–66.
  3. ^ a b c d "Tikoy's 'Dapitan' bats for Manila filmfest". Manila Standard. Kamahalan Publishing Organization. June 3, 1997. p. 19. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  4. ^ a b "'Rizal sa Dapitan' preem set September 30". Manila Standard. Kamahalan Publishing Corp. September 17, 1997. p. 22. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  5. ^ a b Marchadesch, Barbara (July 3, 1997). "GMA's Cinemax offers blueprint for quality films". Manila Standard. Kamahalan Publishing Corp. p. 20. Retrieved August 9, 2023. ...it is a little disheartening that few people saw Dapitan, which is a beautiful movie.
  6. ^ Cruz, Marinel (February 20, 2024). "Tikoy Aguiluz, director of 'Boatman' and 'Segurista,' dies at 72". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved June 25, 2024.


 

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