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DMCI Homes adds third tower to Prisma Residences in Pasig

DMCI Homes continues to expand in Pasig City, with plans to add a third tower to its Prisma Residences project along Pasig Boulevard.
In a statement in Dec. 20, the property arm of DMCI Holdings, Inc. said it is building Kiran at Prisma Residences, following the strong sales at the first two towers, Astra and Celeste.
Prisma Residences sits on a two-hectare-property and offers resort-inspired facilities. Astra and Celeste towers have already been 98% sold out, generating total reservation sales of P8.699 billion as of Sept. 16.
Prisma Residences and Fairlane Residences, which is also located in the same area, were the top drivers of DMCI Homes’ sales during the first nine months of 2018.
Reservation sales of DMCI Homes reached P33.48 billion during the January to September period, on track to hit the company’s P40-billion sales target.
“If it’s any indication of the robust property market in the city, our Pasig projects have been consistent key contributors to the company’s growth through the years… Prisma Residences, for one, has always been a top-seller since the first tower was launched in 2017,” DMCI Homes Assistant Vice-President for Project Development Dennis Yap was quoted as saying.
DMCI Homes already has 11 residential condominium projects in Pasig, including Satori Residences, Brixton Place, Lumiere Residences, Sheridan Towers, and East Raya Gardens.
For the first nine months of 2018, DMCI Homes realized a P3.4-billion attributable profit, which is 29% higher than the same period a year ago due to one-time gain from the sale of its undeveloped lot in Quezon City. Revenues also rose to P14.7 billion, or by two percent, during the same period.
As of end-September, the company has spent P10.3 billion on capital expenditures, with 74% of which was allotted to development costs, while the remaining percentage went to land and asset acquisition. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

High taxes could hasten bank moves from Britain after Brexit

LONDON — Britain risks driving banks overseas if current high levels of taxation on the industry are maintained after Brexit, a bank lobby group said on Wednesday.
Banks in London have already begun to make plans to move staff abroad ahead of Brexit, which will make it more difficult for them to do business in the European Union from Britain.
UK Finance, which represents the country’s finance sector, has published research showing a typical bank in London has a higher tax burden than in rival international financial centres.
The research, by consultancy PwC, found a bank in London faces an effective tax rate on profits of 50.6 percent, compared to 43.8 percent in Frankfurt, and 34.2 percent in New York.
Singapore and Dubai had the lowest tax rates, at 23.2 percent and 22.7 percent respectively.
Stephen Jones, chief executive of UK Finance, urged the UK government to “rethink” bank taxation policies to ensure the overall competitiveness of the UK as a global financial centre is maintained post-Brexit.
“At a time when domestic and international events are forcing many banks to restructure their global operations, it is important to consider the UK’s competitiveness relative to other leading financial centres,” he said.
“This report shows that the UK’s tax competitiveness has been substantially eroded relative to other financial centres to which globally mobile corporate and investment banks based here could relocate.”
Finance firms in the City of London have become increasingly frustrated at the government’s handling of Brexit, with only limited access to the EU market left on the negotiating table and a highly disruptive “no deal” exit still a possibility.
The finance industry is Britain’s largest taxpayer, responsible for more than a tenth of all tax receipts. Finance firms paid a record 75 billion pounds in taxes in the last financial year.
Any move to cut bank taxes would likely be politically unpopular because of widespread mistrust of the City of London financial services industry after banks had to be bailed out by taxpayers in the 2008 financial crisis.
Banks face higher taxes than other firms in Britain, after an additional corporation tax surcharge and levy on assets were imposed after the crisis.
The UK Finance report found banks contributed 36.7 billion pounds of the City’s overall tax haul in the last financial year to March 2018, up 1.3 billion on the previous year. — Reuters

NBC chief hints at Netflix-style service

NBC UNIVERSAL’s boss sent a holiday greeting to employees this week, and it contained an intriguing hint about the coming year.
Steve Burke, head of the Comcast Corp. division, suggested that the company might unveil an online TV service in 2019 — though it’s hard to know how seriously to take a message written in the rhyming style of Dr. Seuss.
“While you all go off to relax, swim or ski,” Mr. Burke wrote. “Maybe, just maybe, next year we will announce our plan for OTT.”
The initials are a reference to “over-the-top” services that provide video content to customers via the internet rather than a traditional satellite or cable TV subscription.
Mr. Burke, who oversees the NBC network, cable channels such as USA, and the Universal theme parks and movie studio, has yet to announce a streaming product like those planned by rivals Walt Disney Co. and AT&T Inc.’s Warner Media next year. But Comcast is getting such a service through its acquisition of Sky Plc.
The whole industry is rushing to compete with Netflix Inc., which continues to amass subscribers and programming for its dominant streaming platform.
In his holiday note, Mr. Burke also lamented that Comcast lost out to Disney in a bidding war for 21st Century Fox’s entertainment assets.
“During 2018 our businesses mostly rocked,” he said. “But it did not feel at all good when Disney got Fox.”
The executive noted the disappointing performance of the Dwayne Johnson film Skyscraper, while praising hits such as Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, the NBC show New Amsterdam and results at the Spanish-language network Telemundo.
“Even though Skyscraper did not quite deliver, we come back next year with Pets 2 in our quiver,” he said. — Bloomberg

TMP aims to increase local content of Vios

TOYOTA Motor Philippines Corp. (TMP) is aiming to boost to 40% the local content of its car model enrolled under the Comprehensive Automotive Resurgence Strategy (CARS) program next year.
TMP First Vice-President Rommel R. Gutierrez said the local content of the Toyota Vios is currently at 35%, a little more than half of the target under the CARS program to increase local content to 60% by 2022.
Established by Executive Order 182 as signed by then President Benigno S. C. Aquino III in 2015, the CARS program provides incentives to three car makers to individually produce their own models locally with a production volume of at least 200,000 units within six years. This equates to an average of 33,333 vehicles annually.
Asked if the company can meet the annual target next year, Mr. Gutierrez told reporters on Wednesday: “That’s our target. We have to.”
TMP president Satoru Suzuki earlier said achieving the target is a tall order considering the current weak market conditions.
The auto industry saw sales slump this year, due to the implementation of higher excise taxes on automobiles last January. This was compounded by the rising inflation rate and higher fuel prices.
Latest joint data from the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines, Inc. and Truck Manufacturers Association showed vehicle sales fell by 14% year-on-year to 325,465 for the first eleven months of 2018.
CAMPI earlier said it expects a 10-15% decline in vehicle sales for the full year.
In 2019, the industry expects sales to bounce back by 10% coming from a low base, and boosted by election spending. — J.C.Lim

Investors revolt against executive pay plans at Australian banks

SYDNEY — Shareholders voted against the executive remuneration plans of two of Australia’s biggest banks on Wednesday following misconduct revelations that have swept through the country’s financial sector.
National Australia Bank shareholders delivered an unprecedented protest vote against the lender’s pay plans, with a record 88.1 percent opposing the executive bonuses presented to the annual general meeting in Melbourne.
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group shareholders also voted down ANZ’s executive bonus plans at a later meeting in Perth, with around 34 percent against, well above the 25 percent required to defeat the motion.
Under Australian corporate rules, if more than a quarter of shareholders vote against a pay proposal for two years running, they can call for the board to be removed. NAB and ANZ now join Westpac Banking Corp. with one strike apiece.
Australian banks have seen about A$67 billion ($48.2 billion) wiped from their market value since February when a quasi-judicial inquiry started public hearings into financial-sector wrongdoing.
The Royal Commission inquiry lifted the lid on widespread malpractice that put profits before customers, disregarded compliance obligations and encouraged misbehavior with conflicted bonuses and commissions.
The inquiry is expected to recommend tougher regulation of the financial sector when it hands its final report to the government in February, particularly around the use of bonuses and incentives.
“Investors today sent a strong message to the boards of NAB and ANZ that they expect much higher levels of accountability for the misdeeds exposed by the Royal Commission,” said Louise Davidson, the CEO of the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI) which represents 39 large funds.
“Investors take issue with the payment of executive bonuses in a year when the Royal Commission highlighted systemic breaches of the law and mistreatment of customers within the banks.”
‘FAILED CAPITALISTS’
The Big Four retail banks yielded close to 20 percent return on equity over the last decade, Refinitiv Eikon data shows. That has shrunk to 12 percent this year as earnings tumble, growth plans are abandoned and fee income is cut in the fallout of the inquiry.
Shareholder Chris Schott told the NAB meeting the bank’s board and its senior management were “failed capitalists, they have destroyed millions and millions of dollars of value. They can’t continue.” The comments were met by cheers in the room.
The 88.1 percent vote against NAB’s remuneration report is a record high for any listed Australian bank.
“This has been a challenging year,” NAB Chairman Ken Henry told the AGM.
“The board is hearing loud and clear that our new scheme is not right. We tried, but we got it wrong. We are listening to you. We will try again.”
He said Australia’s fourth-largest lender would change its pay structure next year, after taking into consideration investors’ concerns and the Royal Commission’s recommendations.
ANZ Chief Executive Officer Shayne Elliott told shareholders the bank “too often failed our customers.”
“We have acknowledged this and publicly apologized,” he said.
The remuneration plans of Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the biggest member of the country’s “Big Four” banks, were passed last month after it lowered executive bonuses and directors’ pay. — Reuters

Phoenix Petroleum sets issue date for commercial paper offering

PHOENIX Petroleum Philippines, Inc. has set the issue date of its commercial paper offering on Dec. 27, after the initial offer of P7 billion ended on Thursday, a company official said.
“(The proceeds will be used) to refinance existing short-term loans of the issuer which were used to finance working cap[ital] requirements for importation of fuels,” said Phoenix Petroleum’s Vice-President for External Affairs Raymond T. Zorrilla in a text message.
Phoenix Petroleum previously said some of its short-term loans with BDO Unibank, Inc., Asia United Bank Corp., Robinsons Bank Corp., United Coconut Planters Bank, and Development Bank of the Philippines are due in December.
Mr. Zorrilla said the initial offering size is in two series, with Series A-1 at P3.5 billion set at a maturity of 180 days at a discount rate of 7.0937%. Series A-2 commercial papers at P3.5 billion are for 360 days, and have a discount rate of 7.4717%.
The offering period started on Dec. 18.
On Wednesday, Phoenix Petroleum said the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had approved the registration of the company’s P10 billion worth of commercial papers and its permit to sell the securities.
On Thursday, shares in the company closed lower by 2.74% at P10.64 each.
Phoenix Petroleum’s commercial paper issuance comes amid the company’s stance to expand its product and service offerings, which now include not just fuels but liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), convenience stores, payments and soon asphalt. — V.V.Saulon

Big director and actress Penny Marshall, 75

WASHINGTON — Penny Marshall, who played an endearingly graceless character with a thick Bronx accent in US television’s Laverne & Shirley before becoming a pioneering film director with hits including Big and A League of Their Own, died at 75, her publicist said on Tuesday.
Ms. Marshall died of complications of diabetes Monday at her home in Hollywood Hills, California, her publicist, Michelle Bega said in a phone interview.
Ms. Marshall played the unrefined but lovable Laverne DeFazio on Laverne & Shirley, a situation comedy that ran on the ABC network from 1976 to 1983, following the lives of two single women and their nutty friends in 1950s and ’60s Milwaukee.
Ms. Marshall, known for her bluntness, described the success of the series this way: “We dared to be stupid.”
Ms. Marshall, the younger sister of successful TV and film director and producer Garry Marshall, turned to directing after her series ended. Her first film was the underwhelming 1986 Whoopi Goldberg comedy Jumpin’ Jack Flash, but that was followed by the charming 1988 hit Big, starring fellow former TV sitcom star Tom Hanks.
Mr. Hanks delivered a great performance in the wistful comedy as a 12-year-old boy whose wish to become an adult is magically granted. The film is known for its classic scene in which Mr. Hanks and Robert Loggia play duets by dancing on a toy store’s foot-operated electronic keyboard.
The success of Big made Ms. Marshall the first woman to direct a film that made more than $100 million at the US box office. The 1992 women’s baseball comedy A League of Their Own made her the first woman to direct two films topping $100 million at the US box office.
Mr. Hanks also appeared in A League of Their Own alongside Geena Davis, Rosie O’Donnell, and pop star Madonna in the story of the first female professional baseball league. The film’s most famous line comes after a player starts sobbing when Mr. Hanks, the team’s irascible manager, chews her out for a baseball blunder.
“Are you crying?” Mr. Hanks asks with incredulity. “There’s no crying. There’s no crying in baseball.”
Ms. Marshall noted that the starring role in Big almost went to tough-guy actor Robert de Niro, who she would later direct in Awakenings (1990), also starring Robin Williams. Awakenings was nominated for three Academy Awards, including best picture.
Other films Ms. Marshall directed included: Renaissance Man (1994) with Danny DeVito; The Preacher’s Wife (1996) with Denzel Washington and Whitney Houston; and Riding in Cars with Boys (2001) with Drew Barrymore.
“Our family is heartbroken over the passing of Penny Marshall,” the Marshall family said in a statement, adding that Penny was a tomboy who loved sports, doing puzzles of any kind, drinking milk and Pepsi together, and being with her family.
Thousands of social media users, including many celebrities, expressed their condolences on Twitter
Actor James Woods wrote online, “I am absolutely devastated. #PennyMarshall was one of my dearest friends. I loved her. Funny, warm, a true individual and remarkable talent. #RidingInCarsWithBoys.”
“Thank you, Penny Marshall. For the trails you blazed. The laughs you gave. The hearts you warmed,” wrote director Ava Duvernay.
She said her lack of fear of being thrown out of Hollywood helped her succeed. “I’ll try anything. What are they gonna do, kick me out of show business?” Ms. Marshall told Reuters in 2012. “I didn’t have that problem because I wasn’t ambitious enough.”
Ms. Marshall chronicled her life in a 2012 book My Mother Was Nuts, filled with stories about growing up in New York City’s Bronx borough, her dance-instructor mother and Ms. Marshall’s drug-fueled times in the 1970s among famous names.
She also battled health problems, including dual diagnoses of lung cancer and a brain tumor in 2009.
She was married to film director Rob Reiner from 1971 to 1979.
She had a daughter, Tracy, from an earlier first marriage. — Reuters

Bangko Sentral income surges to P48.33 billion in first 10 months

THE BANGKO SENTRAL ng Pilipinas’ net income surged fourfold as of October.

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez, Senior Reporter
THE CENTRAL BANK saw its net income rise fourfold as of October, driven by huge gains from foreign exchange at a time of a weaker peso.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) made P48.33 billion in the first 10 months of the year, surging from the P12.38 billion booked in the comparable 2017 period, latest data showed.
Total revenues posted a modest 4.6% increase to hit P55.79 billion at end-October, coming from P53.35 billion a year ago. This came after interest income surged by roughly a third to reach P62.67 billion, but was cancelled out by a net loss of P6.89 billion from miscellaneous sources.
This is a reversal of the P5.65 billion profit last year from fees and penalties collected from banks and other supervised financial firms.
On the other hand, the BSP generated more savings by streamlining its operating costs, which declined by a tenth to P50.29 billion from P55.82 billion the previous year.
Interest expenses also dropped by 23.6% to P23.49 billion, while other spending posted a seven percent climb to P26.8 billion, according to data posted on the BSP website.
Operating revenues netted a P5.5-billion profit, which was boosted by trading gains worth P51.28 billion. Income from currency trades more than tripled from the P14.92 billion generated as of October 2017, just as the peso plunged to 12-year lows versus the dollar.
The local unit traded above P54 versus the greenback in early October, driving the monthly average weaker to P54.0086 versus the P51.3433 rate seen a year ago.
The BSP conducts “tactical intervention” during the daily peso-dollar trading, in line with their mandate of price and financial stability. A weaker peso usually means big gains for the BSP, given that a big chunk of its assets and investments are expressed in dollars.
The BSP also spent P8.44 billion to settle income taxes so far this year, versus the P80 million it shelled out the prior year.
Central bank officials are expecting Congress’ proposal to update the BSP charter to improve their operations and boost their bottom line further, as the measure seeks to grant tax exemptions for governmental functions.
The Senate and the House of Representatives have finalized a bill updating the New Central Bank Act passed back in 1993, which is now awaiting President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s signature.
BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said the central bank is looking forward to its signing into law, as the measure will also grant an additional P150 billion capital and will allow the central bank to set up reserves for foreign exchange fluctuations.
The central bank is on track to remain in the black for the third straight year, and appears to be headed towards a banner year. The BSP has recovered from six straight years of losses after posting a P17.51 billion profit in 2016, followed by a P23.51 billion net income in 2017.

Uber loses latest UK legal bid to block worker rights

LONDON — Uber has lost its latest court bid to stop its British drivers being classified as workers, entitling them to rights such as the minimum wage, in a decision which jeopardizes the taxi app’s business model.
Two drivers successfully argued at a tribunal in 2016 that the Silicon Valley firm exerted significant control over them to provide an on-demand service, and that they should cease to be considered as self-employed, which gives few protections in law.
SPONSORED
An employment appeal tribunal upheld that decision last year, prompting Uber to go to the Court of Appeal. On Wednesday, a majority of judges there said they agreed with the previous verdicts and rejected Uber’s arguments.
“They approve the reasoning of the Employment Tribunal, which relied on a number of features of Uber’s working arrangements as being inconsistent with the driver having a direct contractual relationship with the passenger,” the Court of Appeal said in a summary.
Uber said it would appeal the verdict, meaning the legal process will continue.
“This decision was not unanimous and does not reflect the reasons why the vast majority of drivers choose to use the Uber app,” said a spokeswoman.
“We have been granted permission to appeal to the Supreme Court and will do so.”
Uber, which could be valued at $120 billion in a flotation, has faced protests, regulatory crackdowns and license losses around the world as it challenges existing competitors and rapidly expands.
In Britain, the self-employed are entitled to only basic protections such as health and safety, but workers receive the minimum wage, paid holidays and rest breaks. Uber has introduced a number of benefits for drivers this year.
Unions argue that the gig economy — where people often work for various firms at the same time without fixed contracts — is exploitative, whilst Uber says its drivers enjoy the flexibility and on average earn much more than the minimum wage.
Uber says its practices have been widely used for decades in Britain by minicabs, private hire vehicles which cannot be hailed in the street like traditional black taxis.
The Independent Workers Union of Great Britain, which backed the two drivers in the case, attacked Uber for appealing court decisions which have gone against the firm.
“It is becoming increasingly ridiculous for so-called ‘gig economy’ companies to argue that the law is unclear when they lose virtually every tribunal and court case,” said General Secretary Jason Moyer-Lee. — Reuters

The Metro Manila Film Festival entries

THE 44TH EDITION of the annual Metro Manila Film Festival opens in theaters nationwide on Dec. 25 and runs until Jan. 7, 2019. Here’s a guide to the “Magic 8 lineup” in this year’s festival.

Aurora


IN this horror/thriller directed by Yam Laranas (The Road, Patient X) and starring Anne Curtis-Smith, a ship called Aurora sink near in Batanes, and most of the bodies have yet to be recovered. Leana, an island dweller, starts to look for bodies as they wash up on the shore and soon ghosts begin to haunt the island. The film also starts Lou Veloso, Marco Gumabao, and Allan Paule.
MTRCB Rating: PG

Fantastica: The Prince, the Princess, and the Perya


TO AVOID the closing of their carnival, a family seeks help from magical creatures. Directed by Barry Gonzales, the stars Vice Ganda, Richard Gutierrez, Dingdong Dantes, Bela Padilla, Loisa Andalio, Maris Racal, and Maymay Entrata.
MTRCB Rating: PG

Jack Em Popoy: The Puliscredibles


A team of “puliscredibles” — Jack, Em, and Popoy — prevent crimes within their area. Directed by Michael Tuviera, the film stars Vic Sotto, Coco Martin, and Maine Mendoza.
MTRCB Rating: PG

Mary, Marry Me


MARY ANNE and Pete are planning their wedding — but things get awkward when their wedding planner, who happens to be Mary Anne’s sister, gets in the way of the couples’ relationship. Directed by RC Delos Reyes, the film stars Toni Gonzaga, Alex Gonzaga, and Sam Milby.
MTRCB Rating: PG

One Great Love


ZYRA gives her relationship with Carl another chance, but she finds herself doubting her life choices. The situation gets complicated when she meets Ian, a heart doctor who becomes her confidante. Directed by Eric Quizon, the film stars Dennis Trillo, Kim Chui, and JC de Vera.
MTRCB Rating: PG

OTLUM


A GROUP of friends dare each other to stay in an abandoned orphanage. Directed by Jovinor Tan, this horror film stars Ricci Rivero, Jerome Ponce, and Michelle Vito.
MTRCB Rating: PG

Rainbow’s Sunset


THIS family drama revolves around the reactions in a family when the elderly father confesses to his children that he is in love with his best friend. Directed by Joel Lamangan, the film stars Eddie Garcia, Gloria Romero, Tony Mabesa, Tirso Cruz III, Max Collins, and Sunshine Dizon.
MTRCB Rating: PG

The Girl in the Orange Dress


ANNA wakes up in bed with a famous actor in a five-star hotel but is unable to recall what happened the previous evening. Anna then has to escape the media frenzy caused by their one night stand. Directed by Jay Abello, the film stars Jericho Rosales and Jessy Mendiola.
MTRCB Rating: PG

Domesticated helper

By Noel Vera
Video Review
Roma
Directed by Alfonso Cuaron
ALFONSO CUARON’s Roma is, yes, one of the most beautiful-looking films of the year, a blend of artfully lit footage digitally stitched together to appear a seamless whole.
Based on the director’s memories of Mexico in the 1970s and of his own nanny Liboria Rodriguez, the film tells the story of Cleo (Yalitza Aparicio), a domestic helper living with an upper-middle class family in the relatively affluent district of Colonia Roma, in Mexico City. The opening image reflects this focus: a lingering gaze on floor tiles as soapy water washes across the gleaming surface, and a plane slides across the reflected sky.
Cuaron leisurely establishes mood and character, using no audible soundtrack beyond what is playing on radio or TV or — on occasion — the movie screen; the relative silence, scored mainly to the clatter of plates, the hiss of scrub brushes, the light cacophony of adult and children’s voices quarreling for attention, emphasizes the serenity of the neighborhood compared to the rest of the city.
There are tensions, familial, societal, political. At one point Cleo’s employer Sofia (Marina De Tavira) reprimands her for failing to clean the dogshit off the family carport — the long tiled hallway we saw in the film’s opening; at another Sofia sharply addresses Cleo who stands gaping “Don’t you have anything to do?” Sofia has just been on the phone, in tears: apparently her husband Dr. Antonio (Fernando Grediaga) has left her for another woman.
Cleo has her own problems: she’s seeing the young Fermin (Jorge Antonio Guerrero), and has missed her period. Cleo visits Fermin as he practices kendo in some kind of training camp, dozens of young men swinging bamboo poles. “Is it for the Olympics?” she asks. “Something like that,” Fermin vaguely answers; he runs to board one out of several trucks and buses waiting to drive the youths away.
The film’s themes gradually reveal themselves: the resiliency of women, the fickleness of men, the way class boundaries are permeable and impervious — impervious in that Cleo is obviously bound by her lack of education and economic options, permeable in that she is able to win the affections and touch the sensibilities of the children she serves. In the background we see and hear student activism simmering unhappily under President Luis Echeverria’s regime — Cuaron keeps the politics at arm’s length but can we realistically expect more from a story told through a domestic’s eyes? Cleo is open but not particularly curious; she has no particular interest in the affairs of the larger world. It’s the immediate world that captures her attention — how the sky looks while lying on a rooftop with one of her young charges; how pulque tastes when sneaking a glass behind her employer’s back.
Turns out Cleo never gets to sip that pulque; she’s jostled and her glass shatters. Turns out politics does intrude, spectacularly — when shopping for a cradle with Sofia’s mother Teresa (Veronica Garcia), Cleo is caught in the middle of a student riot turned bloody, the Corpus Christi Massacre. The outside world intrudes on Cleo’s closed-in world and she can only respond according to her limited means and knowledge.
Cuaron hasn’t shaped the narrative into a neat structure which, of course, is one of the most difficult structures to achieve: life seems to meander along till a crisis happens — Dr. Antonio’s departure, a forest fire, an earthquake, a riot — and Cleo’s wide eyes take it all in. The camera mimics Cuaron’s approach, taking a variety of shots then assembling and patting them gently together to create a seamless whole (a 380 degree pan inside the house for example took 45 camera positions digitally combined) — if the film looks stunning, that’s partly because Cuaron has taken his raw material and fussed over every aspect till he got exactly what he wanted.
Cuaron’s achievement reflects both ways, presenting what’s possible using CGI in a realistic (as opposed to fantasy or science fiction) setting, at the same time underlining the scale of challenges facing past cinematographers, who didn’t have CGI and often had to create their effects on-camera in real time.
If the story is a magpie collection of memories and the visual style a magpie collection of footage, so are the references (skip this paragraph if you plan to see the picture!) — the name Cleo for one is presumably a nod to Agnes Varda’s Cleo from 5 to 7 (Cuaron has also taken a page from Varda’s use of location, nonprofessional actors, realism). The Ford Galaxie Dr. Antonio drives is an allusion to Jean-Luc Godard’s Alphaville, where the vehicle was Lemmy Caution’s spacecraft of choice and the basis of one of this film’s funnier running gags: when we first see the doctor he’s painstakingly lining up the car to enter the narrow garage (Wide phallic symbol entering tight space — Freudian much?); later Sofia takes the Galaxie’s wheel and heedlessly rams it home (Wife taking anal revenge?). When Cleo gives birth Cuaron basically takes the same shot Dreyer used in Ordet — Cleo seen from the side, writhing in pain — and adopts a different approach: where Dreyer keeps the woman’s nether regions out of sight and only gives us the horrific sound of shears snipping the baby apart, Cuaron gives us the dead child’s corpse, cradled in one hand like a limp mannequin. I can’t help preferring Dreyer’s version (the sound of those unseen shears linger in memory) but there’s a quiet poignancy to Cuaron’s version, plus Aparicio’s artless performance goes a long way in selling that scene.
Does the film work? Does giving us a panorama of ’70s Mexico glimpsed indirectly through the eyes of a largely passive witness work? It depends I think on one’s feelings on this particular subgenre — I think Bertolucci succeeded in The Last Emperor, where the sight of Pu Yi buffeted by the forces of history had its special pathos. Bertolucci benefited greatly from Vittorio Storaro’s gorgeous colors; Cuaron’s black-and-white digital photography (he shot his own film) serves a similar function, presenting a personal little story set against an epic background with spectacularly understated beautifully designed style. One of the better films of the year, in my book.
Roma can be seen on Netflix.

Philippine cultural center at Kuala Lumpur mall eyed

By Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio
THE Philippine government is in talks with a Malaysian mall operator to establish a permanent cultural center showcasing Filipino products at a shopping mall in Kuala Lumpur.
“The idea is it will be a Filipino center where there will be a food court or Filipino food fiesta. It will be done in Low Yat Mall, one of the biggest malls in Kuala Lumpur,” Special Envoy of the Philippines to Malaysia Wencelito T. Andanar told BusinessWorld at the sidelines of the Malaysia Chamber of Commerce and Industries Philippines, Inc. (MCCI) press conference in Makati City on Dec. 15.
Mr. Andanar said Philippine products will also be sold at the proposed cultural center, similar to the Filipino market in Kota Kinabalu.
“We are going to be selling everything Filipino. It is an exhibition. They are planning more or less a permanent feature, but initially, perhaps, for a certain period like two weeks or one month but over the years, I think it would become a permanent feature in Kuala Lumpur just like in Kota Kinabalu,” he said.
Edward Ling, president of the MCCI, said the establishment of a Philippine cultural expo would help strengthen ties between the Philippines and Malaysia.
“The Malaysian Embassy is definitely in favor of this concept. It can advance more growth of the bilateral relationship, and friendship of the countries for more tourism,” Mr. Ling told BusinessWorld.
Mr. Ling said the expo would not only feature Filipino food but entertainment as well, and booths showcasing Philippine tourist destinations.
“We will have all the available things to be of service to all Filipinos in Malaysia. Food, maybe entertainment, traveling… a section would be given for this purpose,” he said.
The MCCI official said it may be too early to have a specific date for the project’s completion, but hoping it will be launched by 2020.
“We are looking at, if possible, if we can launch it, maybe soft launching in the next year… but 2020 will be the grand launch,” Mr. Ling said.
“We have the space. The space is available, Low Yat, but it is still very early stage to say when it is going to take place. The community is very huge and the location is very ideal,” he added.

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