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    <title>[Lightstalkers] BUNSO (The Youngest) documentary on children in prisons in the Philippines</title>
    <link>http://www.lightstalkers.org/posts/bunso-the-youngest-documentary-on-children-in-prisons-in-the-philippines-20060520</link>
    <description>An entire Lightstalkers thread via RSS/XML.</description>
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      <title>BUNSO (The Youngest) documentary on children in prisons in the Philippines</title>
      <description>http://www.orange.com.ph/misc/bunso/
http://www.ma-yitheatre.org/newsletter/bunso.htm
 Catch the premiere screening of BUNSO (a documentary on children in prisons in the Philippines)
venue: ImaginAsian Theatre
       239 E. 59th st. (bet 2nd and 3rd avenue)
Date: May 24, Wednesday
Time:  7:30pm
ticket: $10
Q and A with the filmmakers follows after the screening
For ticket reservations: email: undergroundpictures@yahoo.com or call 917 476 7807</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 12:54:32 +0000</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.lightstalkers.org/posts/bunso-the-youngest-documentary-on-children-in-prisons-in-the-philippines-20060520</link>
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      <title>Re: BUNSO (The Youngest) documentary on children in prisons in the Philippines</title>
      <description>This would be very interesting. I might be able to see it.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 May 2006 11:09:14 +0000</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.lightstalkers.org/posts/bunso-the-youngest-documentary-on-children-in-prisons-in-the-philippines-20060520#26442</link>
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      <title>Re: BUNSO (The Youngest) documentary on children in prisons in the Philippines</title>
      <description>very good thank's 
is there a french version ? 
take care 
st&#195;&#169;ph</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 May 2006 11:16:24 +0000</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.lightstalkers.org/posts/bunso-the-youngest-documentary-on-children-in-prisons-in-the-philippines-20060520#26443</link>
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      <title>Re: BUNSO (The Youngest) documentary on children in prisons in the Philippines</title>
      <description>
Would love to  watch the documentary, looks very interesting. is it possible to order a copy somehow, can I find it on amazon or elsewhere?

Thanx

Nina
</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 14 May 2006 16:01:40 +0000</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.lightstalkers.org/posts/bunso-the-youngest-documentary-on-children-in-prisons-in-the-philippines-20060520#26983</link>
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    <item>
      <title>Re: BUNSO (The Youngest) documentary on children in prisons in the Philippines</title>
      <description>carina evangelista &lt;carina.evangelista@gmail.com&gt; wrote:

    Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 11:03:22 -0400
    From: &quot;carina evangelista&quot; &lt;carina.evangelista@gmail.com&gt;
    To: pinoyartistsnyc@googlegroups.com
    Subject: Re: Congratulations to all for BUNSO's successful screening


    I felt really bad not having been able to catch last Wednesday's
    screening but Toti, you're right about the &quot;gitla&quot; factor of Ditsi and
    Nana's films. Ditsi, Margaret wants to see your film a third time and
    is even encouraging her son and her grandchildren to see it, too.

    I know you're in the midst of receiving a lot of fan mail but here was
    an email exchange between Renato and me after we saw &quot;Bunso&quot; early
    this year. I think the evidence of the power of a film is the amount
    of discussion it generates.

    FROM RENATO:

    thanks for the invite, Carina. i thought the film was quite an
    experience--very well edited and packed with many moments that give
    you insight into the problem.

    to me, the film's climax was the bunso's &quot;trial&quot; were he faces his
    mother and his jail companions. what an incredible face off. the child
    is gifted with clarity inspite of all the pain, suffering, threats,
    and jeering. that scene alone says many things about this society we
    live in and the many myths perpetuated in this culture.

    listen to the bunso bring up the issue of rank--even police who have
    rank get imprisoned for beating others, what more his parents. and the
    mother replies by pointing out that she outranks the police simply
    because &quot;i gave birth to you, so i have the right to kill you.&quot; the
    bunso challenges her to do so and put him out of his misery. they try
    to shut him up and call his defiance misbehaviour. they threaten him
    with isolation and imprisonment with the &quot;crazies.&quot; but he has to
    speak his truth. that's the perpetuation of myths and the rule by the
    majority over there...the bunso is an incredible child.

    the editing and camera work was masterfully done. even without a voice
    over narrative the film's direction was clear. i like lean
    productions, simple and layered presentations. it's made more powerful
    by this kind of treatment, because this way you see so much more.


    FROM ME:

    Yes, Bunso's &quot;trial&quot; was nothing short of riveting. For me, the most
    powerful indictment of the film is the hypocrisy and the skewed logic
    of all the grown-ups. Everything that came out of the babe's
    mouth--despite the crowd's derision--was not only true but highly
    intelligent. His mind was so sharp, quick, and lucid because it is
    driven by true logic and not by societal illogic. All that the
    grown-ups could retort were threats and silly invocations of bowls of
    chili. But his body language was heart-rending to watch. He was in
    turns flailing his arms and then tucking them under his thighs or
    tight close to his chest. You could feel his desperation. He knew
    that if he didn't get out soon, he was done for. And his soul was
    decrying the betrayal of the horror of a mother who would assuage her
    guilt by visiting him in jail but in fact has obviously left him there
    so that he's one less mouth to feed and one less life to nurture.

    The hypocrisy of the adults was astounding, even Tony's mother's
    neighbor scolding him to get rid of his vices when his very parents
    were the king and queen of vice themselves. Finally, one can tell
    that the reason these boys landed in jail is not just from their
    desperation to survive but primarily because in fact they are indeed
    intelligent. Intelligent enough to understand that singing those
    church songs to dark-tinted windows all day would not exactly feed
    them. Intelligent enough to understand and embody Robin Hood without
    having the literary reference at all. I find nothing but tenderness
    and elegance--absolute sophistication--in these bare-footed kids who
    know something about life and the world no philosopher could ever
    attain.

    And the issues that could be tackled expand exponentially: from the
    ache in our hearts as we hear the pure sound of a boy's singing to the
    child's fight by sheer tightened fist and gritted teeth; the poverty
    that itself is prison to young and adult, cop and robber alike; the
    violence wreaked by poverty; the unspoken hell wrought by economic
    injustice that affects lives whose faces have been rendered abstract
    when they are referred to as &quot;the huddled masses&quot; when in fact what is
    blighted is the pure voice of a child forsaken by the world it was
    born to and what is bludgeoned is the pure love of a mother pushed to
    the bottle by her misery. Who could have rendered better an image of
    Pieta than that captured moment when the boy laid his tired head on
    his mother's lap?

    Ditsi and Nana's mastery is in portraiture. The subjects' humanity is
    so pure no matter how squalid and oppressive their circumstances might
    be that they speak directly to the humanity of their audience. We as
    viewers are left with a complex cocktail of shame, humility,
    compassion, rage, and ultimately fraternity--the most effective
    catalyst for activism. You begin to see the abject as someone who
    could very well be your brother and you cannot help but screech and
    rail at the system that dares reduce him to a tattered shirt and a wet
    floor on which to sleep.

    James Baldwin wrote: ''It is a terrible, an inexorable, law that one
    cannot deny the humanity of another without diminishing one's own: in
    the face of one's victim, one sees oneself.&quot; The lust for dignity
    that these children displayed enjoins us to shed the hypocrisy of
    notions of our own humanity if we cannot protect and honor theirs.
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      <pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2006 12:50:43 +0000</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.lightstalkers.org/posts/bunso-the-youngest-documentary-on-children-in-prisons-in-the-philippines-20060520#27854</link>
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