Peque Gallaga, the director as mentor
Even as fresh names are taking the reins of Philippine filmdom nowadays, the senior masters never fade away. The legendary filmmaker Peque Gallaga – despite making himself scarce in the capital – continues to loom large as a guiding force to a new generation of film talents from the South. The 64-year-old director-writer admits that he has always gravitated towards younger company, and his new barkada in
Teaching since 1966, Gallaga holds a storied record of discovering and nurturing talents. With the current reemergence of the indie film movement, he enjoys a regular load of “homework” – his joking reference to outputs requesting critique, local film fests to judge, or projects simply wanting his moral support. All these have helped bring his role to a focus – which is, getting these young talents to recognize that they are artists. “It’s very empowering to be able to make them understand that they are artists.”
With expressive storytelling, the shifting timber of his voice and the play of facial expressions, it’s no wonder students swear that Gallaga as a teacher doesn’t lecture, but “makes drama.” Gallaga also provides hands-on training by involving students in his movies whether as set design assistants or movie extras. “I’m strict in the sense that you can’t be absent, you can’t be late, but within the class, it’s very informal. We’re like barkada,” explains Gallaga, who has been spearheading the Negros Summer Workshops for several years now. It’s an undertaking lauded for decentralizing holistic and inexpensive film training to the province and giving rise to original materials that scored citations in prestigious award-giving bodies like Bahaghari and Palanca. Among the growing filmmaking communities in the country’s southern metropolises,
Whether he downplays his influence or not, it’s not hard to notice that in recent years, particularly if you’ve kept tabs on indie film fests, most of the regional filmmakers turning heads are Negrosanons acknowledged as Gallaga’s protegés. Gallaga feels proud to have succeeded in imparting technique.
“But for me, attitude counts more,” he points out. “In filmmaking, you don’t get a lot of money, but you get power. I tell them to stay humble and pray to God they don’t go crazy. I have experienced it, and to be crazy can be at times necessary, but they have to get out of the craziness as fast as they can.”
While he started his filmmaking career as an indie in the 70’s, Gallaga actually started as a copywriter for a big advertising company, and eventually as an instructor on drama at De La Salle University in the late 60’s. Without any formal background in drama, except for a few acting stints in student stage plays (“Only because I was mestizo,” he muses), he claims he taught himself to teach theater.
“Fortunately though, I had a very good group. In one of our classes, since walang video at that time, I bought a Super 8 movie camera, and I would shoot my actors in De La Salle, put music to it, and show it to the advertising people. So in 1969, we were already making MTVs,” he now recalls. A father of a student, who happened to be on the board of directors of a TV station, was impressed with their “experimentations” and had them aired on TV – “Fabulous Gamboas” on Channel 13. It was thanks to Mama Ateng Osorio, one of the pioneering female directors in the country who exploited his potential by making him work with acting veterans through the program, that it came to him that there exists this rich history of Philippine cinema. It did not take long for him to fall in love with it. Martial law saw him landing his first movie project “Binhi” with Butch Perez starring Rosemary Sonora. But his personal life suffered amid the new path that his directorial career was heading. So he decided to return to
In
Also at that time, he had finished a film script that took inspiration from his provincial background – but nobody wanted it. “Nobody was buying it and Marilou Diaz Abaya told me to submit old scripts I wasn’t able to sell to this contest on experimental cinema. And I won! They asked me who I wanted to direct the script, and I said I would. And from there my career took off.” That script came alive via his magnum opus, “Oro, Plata, Mata,” now touted as one of the country’s finest cinematic experiences, which narrates the changing fortunes of a wealthy provincial family as they deal with the terrors of World War II. Twenty-five years after “Oro, Plata, Mata,” with over 40 films that critics say made him the defining figure in Philippine genre filmmaking, the question on his proudest works has to be raised. He delays a bit before saying, “I’m very grateful and proud of ‘Oro, Plata, Mata’ because everybody remembers it. In fact, I hate it already because everybody comes up to me, and says ‘I love your Oro, Plata, Mata’… but hey, it was my first hit, and I’ve done over 40 movies since. It was also flawed but it’s a classic now, so why complain?” He’s also proud of his love-and-obsession-charged 80’s films “Scorpio Nights” and”“Unfaithful Wife,” as well as the historical drama “Virgin Forest” – all of which habitually appear in any certified Filipino cineaste’s best-ever films list. Gallaga has not missed out on the comedy genre as well, but he admits his brand of humor comes across strange for Filipinos. The latest one was “Pinoy/Blonde” which was his last big screen outing. While he’s been flying intermittently to
All these and more add to the “better quality of life” he is relishing in the South. He lives in
One of these movies would be in the same essence as “Oro, Plata, Mata.””“It’s not a sequel and not the same people. It’s the same situation, but my interest is because it’s me years after, watching the same chemistry of people. It’s me who’s changed. Sex and violence are not important to me anymore. It’s wiser, more forgiving, and more on the self and the soul.”
When told that his return is sure to warrant great expectations, he says, “Three years ago, I was worried about coming back. I mean what would I do to make an impact? But I’m not worried about it anymore. I don’t care. When I come back, I will do what I want to do.”
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