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Megaworld eyes P6.5-B sales from Bonifacio project

MEGAWORLD Corp. is targeting young professionals and executives for its third residential tower inside its McKinley West township in Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City, looking to generate P6.5 billion in sales from the project.
The Andrew L. Tan-led property developer on Thursday launched Park McKinley West, a 25-storey residential tower that offers units with one to five bedrooms.
“From seasoned achievers to young professionals and executives, and rising entrepreneurs, Park McKinley West becomes a testimony of everyone’s accomplishment in life. We are tapping on this new generation of accomplished individuals to live in this rising business district,” Megaworld Senior Vice-President for Sales and Marketing Noli D. Hernandez said in a statement.
Each unit is sized anywhere from 48.5 square meters, 110 sq.m., 212 sq.m., 229 sq.m., and 336 sq.m., depending on the number of rooms.
Amenities include a lap pool and children’s pool, fitness center, function rooms, a pool deck with pool lounge chairs, outdoor sitting areas, water features, children’s playground, game room, and a Sky Deck on the 15th floor. It also added wellness amenities such as a Yoga Room and Outdoor Yoga Deck.
Megaworld aims to complete the project by 2022.
Park McKinley West follows the development of Megaworld’s first two residential buildings in McKinley West, namely St. Moritz Private Estate and The Albany.
Launched in 2015, St. Moritz Private Estate is a two-tower, nine-storey development in McKinley West. Megaworld said earlier this year that it will start turning over the project’s units this year.
Meanwhile, The Albany is a low-rise residential tower that offers 64 units, each with a private balcony. The project is expected to generate P3 billion in sales.
McKinley West is the company’s P45-billion township covering 34.5 hectares. The mixed-use estate sits directly beside Forbes Park and Manila Polo Club.
Megaworld delivered an 11.3% increase in attributable profit for the first three months of 2018 to P3.2 billion, supported by a 10% climb in revenues to P13.1 billion. The company attributed the growth to its residential and office businesses.
Shares in Megaworld gained 6.81% or 31 centavos to P4.86 each at the Philippine Stock Exchange on Thursday. — Arra B. Francia

Donald Trump breaks silence on Roseanne race row, attacks ABC

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Wednesday broke his silence about the racism row engulfing supporter Roseanne Barr, not to condemn her outburst but to attack ABC television for purported media bias.
The US network on Tuesday canceled hit sitcom Roseanne, after star Barr fired off a racist tweet against former White House advisor Valerie Jarrett, who was one of Barack Obama’s closest aides.
Jarrett revealed that Bob Iger, the head of ABC parent company Disney, telephoned her personally to tell her the network was canceling the show.
“Bob Iger of ABC called Valerie Jarrett to let her know that ‘ABC does not tolerate comments like those’ made by Roseanne Barr,” Trump tweeted Wednesday.
“Gee, he never called President Donald J. Trump to apologize for the HORRIBLE statements made and said about me on ABC. Maybe I just didn’t get the call?”
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders later defended the president, saying that he was hitting out against media bias.
“The president is pointing to the hypocrisy in the media,” she said.
“This is a double standard that the president is speaking about. No one is defending her comments. They’re inappropriate, but that’s what the point that he was making.”
When the scandal first broke, the White House had deflected questions with Sanders saying: “We have a lot bigger things going on in the country right now.”
Barr, 65 and a vocal Trump supporter who has used Twitter to voice far-right and conspiracy theorist views, took aim at Jarrett in a post that read: “Muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby = vj.”
She later apologized for what she called a “joke.” But ABC said it was canceling the show, condemning her “abhorrent, repugnant” tweet, which was “inconsistent with our values.”
“I’m not a racist, I never was & I never will be,” Barr tweeted Wednesday, attempting to defend herself against an onslaught of criticism.
“One stupid joke in a lifetime of fighting 4 civil rights 4 all minorities, against networks, studios, at the expense of my nervous system/family/wealth will NEVER b taken from me.”
A since-deleted tweet blaming her outburst on a dose of the sleeping pill Ambien, prompted a swift retort from pharma giant Sanofi.
“While all pharmaceutical treatments have side effects, racism is not a known side effect of any Sanofi medication,” tweeted the French pharmaceutical giant in an acerbic post that quickly went viral.
Roseanne had returned to US screens in March after a 21-year hiatus with Barr’s character recast as a Trump supporter in a rare depiction of working class life on the US small screen.
The show scored huge ratings and had been renewed for an 11th season following largely positive reviews — including from the president. — AFP

Digitization calls for ‘massive investment in retooling of workers’


SINGAPORE — Men and women in suits rushed to meeting rooms at the Capella Singapore.
The venue was vintage Singapore — a blast from the late 1800 era as the Capella hotel was built around two colonial structures, actually former military buildings that were restored.
But the agenda was everything but old: digitization.
They are actually senior executives — managers and directors from Thailand, Philippines, Malaysia, Japan and parts of Europe — about 40 of them, huddled for a lecture by the Lausanne-based International Institute for Management Development (IMD), as part of a five-day management course the business school holds twice a year in Singapore and Switzerland. The case study for that class was the story of DBS Bank’s successful digital transformation.
The Singapore-listed bank’s transformation was over half a decade in the making from 2009 and started with eliminating wastes from paper to customer time. It literally broke down barriers, dismantling traditional branches and making the bank nearly invisible by allowing customers to go around with the bank in their pockets. It meant cutting headcount to be replaced with leaner, central teams of about 15 people. The result was a bank that scales across regions with little investment, yet with high customer satisfaction scores — a lender unrecognizable from what it was about a decade ago.
DBS is a trailblazer in digital banking in this part of the world, and more are expected to follow suit.
Digitization and artificial intelligence (AI), despite their clear benefits, do have a downside: they are a threat to jobs in the region, the Asian Development Bank said.
However, judging by the attendance at IMD’s management classes, Asian executives are embracing the shift, reconciling their old-school mind-sets with those of the young millennials.
“I think the best ones [companies] will digitize quickly, especially when there’s exposure to international competition,” IMD President Jean-Francois Manzoni said in an interview.
The banking sector, as well as companies in the logistics and insurance industries, is likely to adopt fast, capitalizing on data analytics most of them have been using in the past decades.
“Asian economies tend to be younger. There are lots of reasons this [digitization] will happen faster in Asia,” Mr. Manzoni said.
For workers at risk of losing jobs to AI, it’s not all doom and gloom. Google, for instance, has been testing driverless cars, but the trucking industry is still alive.
“Drivers do not just drive,” the IMD executive pointed out. “While some jobs will be lost, jobs in other areas will be created as well.”
That’s where government help must come in.
“There’s a need for massive investment in retooling of workers,” Mr. Manzoni said.
“There are some generations with a digital disadvantage… we need to have investments,” he said, noting that learning is “not a matter of age” as there are people in their 80s who still want to learn.
“At some point, it becomes a national issue how to make people retool,” Mr. Manzoni added.
Countries that “do not help youngsters to be prepared for the world” and say that “they’re too old to retool” risk having their citizens “falling by the wayside,” fanning labor discontent.
Wealthy Singapore, with its lifelong learning investment fund, provides the template its Asian peers can emulate, he added.

Japanese firms keen on Malolos-Tutuban railway

THE North-South Commuter Railway (NSCR) project is attracting strong interest from several Japanese companies, according to an official of the Philippine National Railways (PNR).
The Department of Transportation (DoTr) and PNR are scheduled to hold a pre-bid conference for its project today (June 1).
PNR General Manager Junn B. Magno told BusinessWorld in a text message that they met yesterday with around seven to eight Japanese companies who are prospective bidders.
“They went to see the alignment, the station areas and where construction staging areas will be assigned to winning bidder,” he said.
In a separate statement, DoTr said representatives from Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp., Megawide Construction Corp., and the joint venture of Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) and Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Company, BPI/MS Insurance Corp., attended the meeting.
The representatives checked the areas for the PNR stations, depots, and viaducts in Caloocan, Tutuban, Solis, and Valenzuela in Manila, as well as in Balagtas, Bocaue, Guiguinto, Malolos, Marilao, and Meycauayan in Bulacan.
The NSCR project, which is also called PNR North 1, is a 37.9-kilometer railway connecting Malolos, Bulacan to Tutuban, Manila.
DoTr opened the bidding of the civil works and building components of the NSCR project in mid-May. Two contract packages are available for prospective bidders: the first one for elevated structures, seven stations and a depot; and the second one for elevated structure and three stations.
The $2.88-billion project is funded through a portion of the loan agreement between the Department of Finance and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) in 2015, which amounts to ¥241.991 billion.
“Because this is a JICA loan, primary contractors are usually Japanese. There were local partners of the Japanese contractors, I was told. Am sure they will use local subcontractors to deliver the work on time,” Mr. Magno noted.
Interested companies may buy the bidding documents for a non-refundable price of P50,000. Bidding will close on Aug. 16 for the two contracts.
The NSCR is expected to reduce travel time from Malolos to Tutuban to only 35 minutes from the current one hour and 30 minutes when it is completed. It is scheduled for opening in December 2021 and aims to service more than 300,000 every day.
The project is only one part of the government’s plan to connect the National Capital Region, Region 3 and Region 4-A. It also aims to construct PNR North 2, a line connecting Clark International Airport to the New Clark City, and PNR South Commuter to Los Baños, Laguna. — Denise A. Valdez

Understanding Executive Order 51

AS WITH every Labor Day presidential pronouncement in the past, President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s announcement of his Executive Order (EO) No. 51, regarding contractualization in the workplace, prompted criticism among stakeholders — from the muted to the outright vocal, especially by labor groups.
These stakeholders were already privy to the contents of EO 51, but it wasn’t until May 2, following Mr. Duterte’s announcement, that Malacañang released the order, which continues to stir discussion as to what it really means for contractuals.
Contractualization became a major election issue during Mr. Duterte’s 2016 campaign. After some two years in office with drafts of the EO sitting on his desk, Mr. Duterte finally issued an executive order that, at best, elicited mixed reactions.
But the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) has endeavored to tackle the phenomenon of contractualization in line with EO 51’s provision on the agency’s monitoring authority. Meanwhile, the Senate committee on labor and employment has completed the proposed Security of Tenure and End of Endo Act of 2018 for consideration by the plenary.
Sought to explain EO 51, Director Benjo M. Benavidez of DoLE’s Bureau of Labor Relations said the order just “reinforces existing provisions. So if you notice, there are provisions there in the executive order that are already found in the Labor Code of the Philippines.”
“The very nature of an executive order is to execute and implement existing laws, rules, and regulations. It (the EO) cannot amend or supplant existing provisions of law,” he added.
Mr. Benavidez also said EO 51 is still “a reinforcement because we added some provisions,” referring to Section 4 of the order on DoLE’s inspection powers — which, to be sure, is “consistent with Article 128 (Visitorial and Enforcement Power) of the Labor Code.”
He further cited another order which is more comprehensive in defining the working terms under contractualization: Department Order (DO) No. 174, which Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III issued in March last year.
Besides labor-only contracting, “other prohibited contracting practices can be found in Section 6 of DO 174,” Mr. Benavidez said. “Some of the mentioned prohibited activities in the DO are contractors/subcontractors repeatedly hiring employees after the end of a contract of short duration… and employees of contractors/subcontractors doing the same job as the principal’s regular employees.” — Gillian M. Cortez

Film producer Weinstein indicted for rape

NEW YORK — Movie producer Harvey Weinstein was indicted on Wednesday on charges of rape and a criminal sexual act, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance said, the first case to emerge from a slew of sexual misconduct allegations against him.
“This indictment brings the defendant another step closer to accountability for the crimes of violence with which he is now charged,” Vance said in a statement on the charges against the disgraced 66-year-old cofounder of the Miramax film studio and the Weinstein Co.
The grand jury indictment follows his arrest and court appearance last Friday on charges related to two among about 70 women who have accused him of sexual misconduct, all of which Weinstein has denied.
Vance’s statement said Weinstein was charged with rape in the first and third degrees and a criminal sexual act in the first degree.
Ben Brafman, the head of Weinstein’s legal team, said his client would plead not guilty and defend himself against the charges.
If convicted on the most serious charges, Weinstein could face between five and 25 years in prison.
Earlier on Wednesday, Weinstein declined to testify before the grand jury after a judge denied a request by his lawyers to postpone the appearance. Brafman had argued Weinstein was denied access to information about the case and lacked preparation time.
“Mr. Weinstein intends to enter a plea of not guilty and vigorously defend against these unsupported allegations that he strongly denies,” Brafman said in a statement after the indictment.
“We will soon formally move to dismiss the indictment and if this case actually proceeds to trial, we expect Mr. Weinstein to be acquitted.”
The grand jury indictment spares the prosecution the step of having to go before a judge to demonstrate there is enough evidence to bring Weinstein to trial.
The indictment follows a months-long investigation with the New York Police Department. Police have not identified the two women, but said the crimes took place in 2004 and 2013.
Weinstein remains out on $1-million cash bail ordered by a judge last Friday. Weinstein surrendered his US passport and agreed to wear a monitoring device that tracks his location, confining him to the states of New York and Connecticut.
Some of the allegations date back decades. Weinstein has denied ever having nonconsensual sex.
The accusations, first reported last year by the New York Times and the New Yorker, gave rise to the #MeToo movement, in which hundreds of women have publicly accused powerful men in business, government and entertainment of sexual misconduct.
Actresses who have publicly accused Weinstein of sexual misconduct include Uma Thurman, Ashley Judd, Rose McGowan, and Salma Hayek. — Reuters

420-MW Pagbilao plant seen to boost electricity supply in Luzon

By Victor V. Saulon, Sub-Editor
PAGBILAO, Quezon — Aboitiz Power Corp. and TeaM Energy Corp. have formally launched on Thursday the 420-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant in Pagbilao, Quezon that is expected to boost electricity supply in Luzon.
The facility, which costs $976 million to build, stands next to the 735-MW Pagbilao power station’s units 1 and 2, which the partners handle.
“The completion of this project establishes Pagbilao Energy Corp.’s (PEC) partnership with government in pushing the nation’s progress through a cost-effective and reliable power plant that complies with environmental standards,” Antonio R. Moraza, president and chief operating officer of AboitizPower, said during the event which had President Rodrigo R. Duterte as its main guest.
Mr. Moraza also chairs PEC, a joint venture between TPEC Holdings Corp. and Therma Power, Inc., which are in turn wholly owned subsidiaries of TeaM Energy and AboitizPower, respectively.
“The growth of the Philippine economy under the administration of President Duterte will certainly translate to a rising demand for energy in the coming years. This project will help address the country’s development needs moving forward,” PEC President John V. Alcordo said.
“We view this project as an investment in the country’s future. This will light up homes and industries, give comfort to families, enable productivity and help create employment for Filipinos,” said Mr. Alcordo, who is also chairman and chief executive officer of TeaM Energy, which is said to be the single largest Japanese investment in the Philippines.
Construction on the Pagbilao power plant unit 3 began in December 2014.
Erramon I. Aboitiz, chief executive officer of AboitizPower, said the partners in the project had taken the risk of committing equity in an energy conversion agreement structure “to give comfort to our creditors, yet putting more of the offtake risk to the project proponents.”
“Like us, others have followed suit and build additional merchant power plants on the premise that open access will be fully implemented,” he said.
He said the company and others in the power industry are “awaiting the full implementation of open access reducing the thresholds for contestability from 1 MW to 750 kW (kilowatts) and the further reduction to 500 kW and below.”

Employee engagement in the PHL bounces back

EMPLOYEE engagement levels in the Philippines rose by six points to 71%, according to a new report from Aon, a global professional services firm that provides a range of risk, retirement and health solutions.
Philippines’ increase is significant when compared to the nine-point drop it experienced last year. According to Aon research, improving engagement pays dividends. A five-point increase in employee engagement is linked to a three-point increase in revenue growth in the subsequent year.
Overall employee engagement score for the Philippines is higher than key Asia Pacific economies including China (69%), Thailand (64%), Malaysia (63%), Australia (60%), and Singapore (59%).
TOP ENGAGEMENT DRIVERS
The Aon study found that “Talent and Staffing” and “Empowerment and Autonomy” top the list of engagement drivers in the Philippines. “Talent and Staffing” refers to talent attraction and retention practices of an organization, as well as its ability to allocate appropriate and adequate resources to get the job done. This is important as it may impact the quality of work produced, and directly affect employees’ experience of work-life balance and their sense of achievement.
In addition, Filipino employees seek organizations that provide flexibility for them to plan and take decisions to best complete their work.
The top five engagement opportunities in the Philippines are as follows: Talent and Staffing; Empowerment and Autonomy; Rewards and Recognition; Career and Development; Senior Leadership.
ENGAGING MILLENNIALS
The Philippines is home to one of the world’s youngest employee populations, with half of its citizens below 34 years of age.
While 75% of millennials feel that their organization actively supports the learning and development of its employees, only 53% report being fairly paid compared to other employees in the same roles in their organization. Moreover, only 58% feel they are recognized (beyond pay) for their contributions in the organization.
Prashant Chadha, Aon managing director for Malaysia and the Philippines, says: “The jump in engagement level is a result of the continuing efforts of leading organizations in creating a holistic employee experience across generations. This includes investments in health and well-being programs. However, rapid digitization and the increasing number of millennial employees indicate an urgent need for employers to transform their people practices. Filipino companies must invest in ‘continuous listening’ and act on feedback quickly. At the same time, they must select top talent who are ‘wired for engagement’ by using sophisticated assessment tools.”

2001: A Space Odyssey returns, looking just as it did in 1968

By Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-Times
WHEN DIRECTOR Christopher Nolan showed 2001: A Space Odyssey to his young children years ago, one of them had a question:
“Why is the computer talking?”
The child was, of course, referring to HAL 9000, the sentient computer who speaks in a calm and slightly chilling voice, even when it takes drastic steps against the humans on a spaceship to preserve its consciousness.
“This was pre-Siri,” Nolan tells me by phone. “In a way, HAL is now more relevant than ever.”
Nolan, the 47-year-old director of The Dark Knight trilogy, Inception, Interstellar, and Dunkirk, oversaw the creation of a 70-mm print of 2001 struck from new printing elements taken from the original camera negative.
This means there were no digital enhancements, no edits, no remastered or new effects.
“I woke up in the middle of the night and realized I should call this an ‘unrestored’ version,” says Nolan. “A restoration becomes interpretive if you ‘paint out’ things, get rid of the scratches …
“You could say this is an analog version of the film. I liken this to hearing an album on vinyl rather than an MP3. There might be some scratches, but there’s also a richness you wouldn’t have with a restoration.”
In layman’s terms: This is about as close as you’re going to get to seeing Stanley Kubrick’s legendary masterwork the way audiences experienced the film when it was released a little more than 50 years ago, in the spring of 1968.
I had the opportunity to screen this version of 2001 recently — and it truly was a revelation.
The opening sequence (“The Dawn of Man”) was breathtakingly gorgeous and at times brutal and shocking.
The set pieces popped with reds and oranges and other vibrant colors. (A space-travel terminal features a Howard Johnson’s lounge, phones with a face-time calling feature and furniture designs that actually became popular in the real world.)
Long before the advent of CGI, the scenes of spaceships gliding through the heavens are stunning and beautiful. (In long shots, you can make out tiny human figures moving about a ship.)
And the famous “Star Gate” finale, in which astronaut Dave Bowman (Keir Dullea) passes through an inter-dimensional portal, explodes with intense colors that might leave you exhilarated but also in search of an aspirin.
Nolan presented 2001: A Space Odyssey at the recent Cannes Film Festival. (Remarkably, this marked Nolan’s first trip to Cannes.) It is playing in select US cities].
Whether you’ve experienced 2001 a half-dozen times over the years or have never seen it, this is a golden opportunity to see one of the most groundbreaking and influential and mind-blowing films ever made, in optimal circumstances.
In 1968, early reaction to 2001 from critics and industry types was mixed at best.
A recent article in the Hollywood Reporter was headlined: “In 1968, 2001: A Space Odyssey Confounded Critics.”
In April in The New Yorker, Dan Chiasson wrote that “(a) sixth of the New York premiere’s audience walked right out, including several executives from MGM. Many who stayed jeered throughout.
“The after-party at the Plaza was ‘a room full of drinks and men and tension,’ according to Kubrick’s wife, Christiane.”
Nolan: “I’m not just saying this because I’m talking to a film critic, but it’s very unusual for so many prominent critics to initially miss the boat on a film like this. I can’t think of another example.
“But audiences took to it right away. It was embraced by the public and was the No. 1 film at the box office in 1968.”
Nolan was born two years after the initial release of 2001. He says one of his first memories of cinema was watching the film at Leicester Square Theatre in London (“they re-released it after the success of Star Wars”) with his father in the 1970s.
Was there anything about the film that surprised Nolan — anything new he appreciated — as he oversaw this project?
“What surprised me were the quality of the performances,” says Nolan. “There are layers in many of the performances. Take the scene where Dr. Floyd (William Sylvester) meets with the Russians… There’s a lot going on there.”
As for the scarcity of dialogue in the film (we’re 25 minutes into the story before the first line is spoken, and the final 20-plus minutes are dialogue-free), Nolan says this is a film that “demands and rewards our attention” and notes how there are so many instances of “body language (used as) communication.”
Clearly, Kubrick’s work has informed Nolan’s films, but Nolan says Kubrick is more inspiration than influence.
“There’s very little you can do in specific terms of technique because what Kubrick did was inimitable,” Nolan says. “I hold him in the highest esteem. He’s way up there above the rest of us.” — Andrews McMeel Syndication

Rate spike blamed on T-bills

SURGING Treasury-bill issuance is curbing the Federal Reserve’s ability to control short-end interest rates, limiting its capacity to keep the effective fed funds rate within the central bank’s target range, according to Credit Suisse Group AG analyst Zoltan Pozsar.
The Treasury’s nearly $350 billion of bill sales in the first quarter flooded a market already awash in substitutes, from Federal Home Loan Bank discount notes to an expanded foreign repurchase agreement pool and synthetic T-bills via FX swaps, the former US Treasury adviser wrote in a note Wednesday.
That helped fuel a spike in bill yields, which effectively pushed key overnight rates higher as well. Some are already trading above the Fed’s target range — currently 1.50% to 1.75%. The fed funds rate appears poised to follow suit, currently sitting at 1.70%.
In an effort to nudge the effective rate back toward the middle of the band, Fed officials are mulling lowering the interest on excess reserves (IOER) rate relative to the upper bound of the fed funds target range. Pozsar said tweaking the IOER rate, which is currently pegged to the top of the target range, won’t work, and in fact will only hasten a fed funds breakout.
“The Fed should not be doing anything at the moment to cap rates, for the source of the problem is not an insufficient amount of interbank liquidity, but an excessive amount of bills which are being issued in an environment where the world no longer needs them,” Pozsar wrote in the 14th note of a widely followed series he’s published on global money markets.
The diminished appetite for T-bills went unrealized in 2017 because the Treasury was constrained by the debt ceiling. This limited how much the government could issue in short-term securities. Congress passed a debt-ceiling suspension in February that paved the way for the supply deluge.
The glut pushed usage of the Fed’s overnight reverse repo facility to record lows, while T-bills became the effective floor for overnight rates, Pozsar wrote. The rise in bill yields boosted overnight tri-party repo rates to just under the IOER rate, and general collateral financing repo rates outside the target range.
Now that repo rates are trading above the fed funds rate, fed funds volumes are declining, driving the uptick in the Fed effective rate toward the central bank’s upper bound.
No matter the caps the Fed imposes, policy makers may not be able to fix the distortions in short-term rates, according to Pozsar.
“Only the US Treasury can fix this, not the Fed,” he wrote. — Bloomberg

Rock the Devil

By Noel Vera
Movie Review
Ang Panahon ng Halimaw
Directed by Lav Diaz
MTRCB Rating: R-13
NOT LONG AFTER Brillante Mendoza’s Amo (which takes its cue from Respeto’s rap-driven score) we have Lav Diaz’s take on the Duterte regime. Panahon ng Halimaw (Season of the Devil, 2018) is no small-scale response: 234 minutes long, some six minutes short of four hours. And it’s a musical.
“A four hour musical?” you ask, but such prodigies are not unheard of: Ramesh Sippy’s Sholay runs 204 minutes and (not that it really matters) has gone on to become one of the biggest box-office hits in Indian film history; Ashutosh Gowariker’s Lagaan is only 10 minutes shorter than Diaz’s latest and has earned respectable money, locally and internationally.
Diaz had to take matters a step further of course: the film has no instrumental accompaniment whatsoever, with all numbers sung a capella (by way of comparison Bruno Dumont’s recent Jeannette: the Childhood of Joan of Arc features drums, synthesizer, electric guitar, even dancing); it’s black and white (Dumont’s is in color); its narrative is oblique (aside from a voiceover narration establishing setting — 1979 in the southern Philippines — we’re on our own) and glacially paced. If Diaz as he’s often declared in interviews wants to produce uncompromising cinema this is about as uncompromising as things get, without even a single strummed guitar chord to help the plaintive singing go down easier (except in the end where the director himself performs a song).
Which leaves you with — what? Figures standing on the big screen, often for minutes at a time. The camera (operated by Larry Manda) almost always locked down, though to Diaz’s credit his staging, framing, and lighting have developed considerably — the camera tilted at an often slightly surreal angle, the brutal lamps creating startling effects (the flood of light, the inky pools of shadows), the long-take wide shots encapsulating an actor’s movements (or relative lack of), a singer’s entire performance. Diaz seems to aspire to a Brechtian simplicity — the empty stage with lone figures standing at strategic points, casting shadows that interlock in interesting ways.
And something happens. The monochrome imagery, the melancholic characters, the lilt and lyricism of voice and words and song get a hold of you and — if you happen to still be paying attention, if you’re tuned in to Diaz’s severe aesthetics — squeeze.
This is Mindanao two years after Marcos’s Presidential Decree 1016 established the Civilian Home Defense Forces (CHDF) — paramilitary units trained and equipped by the Department of National Defense which were notorious for civil rights abuses and killings. At the same time this is also 2017 Philippines: gunmen on a bike ride up to a youth and shoot him in the head; a cardboard sign is fixed on his body — “AKO’Y REBELDE HUWAG TULARAN (I’M A REBEL DON’T IMITATE)!” The Tenyente (Hazel Orencio — a startling departure from her helpless Florentina Hubaldo) and Ahas (Joel Saracho) scheme to win support of the masses: “We’ll blame The Owl (Pinky Amador)!” “We’ll blame The Scholar (Bart Guingona)!” “We” will use superstition and simpleminded thinking (“Fault the intellectual, the drug addict, the Other”) to impose order on chaos, clarity on confusion.
Diaz doesn’t mince words, doesn’t employ his usually sly satiric touch or sense of moral ambivalence, presumably because he considers Duterte too far gone down the path of fascism for subtlety to be effective, much less desired. He directly equates the present president’s war on drugs with Marcos’s war on communism, accuses both chief executives of exploiting a hot-button issue to justify terror, oppression, indiscriminate killing.
To this end, The Tenyente and Ahas appoint Chairman Narciso (Noel Sto. Domingo) as leader of their cause. Narciso comes straight out of a nightmare, with a face on either side of his head: the front with its sour deep-lined expression, the back blind and silent (nice touch: the blind face wears glasses). Narciso was possibly inspired by the story of Edward Mordrake, a likely apocryphal man with a face growing out of the back of his head; it was said that the extra face (of a beautiful girl) would torment him with whispers of temptations and “such things as they speak of only in Hell,” ultimately driving him to kill himself.
Diaz, with the help of makeup artist Daniel Palisa, has a field day creating Narciso’s head — the face in the back resembles (from differing angles) the product of an unholy breeding experiment between Duterte, Marcos, and Marcos’s Defense secretary (later Defense minister) Juan Ponce Enrile, who helped engineer the 1972 declaration of martial law. When Chairman Narciso delivers a speech it’s a high-pitched rant that makes no sense whatsoever (from Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine: the lips “would gibber without ceasing”) — a brilliant parody on Duterte’s obscenity-laced word-salad tirades that recall Chaplin’s wicked take on Hitler in Modern Times (Critics complain that Diaz lacks humor; I submit that his dry absurdist comedy tends to slip past their grasp). Duterte a braying emptyheaded figurine exploited by his lieutenants to commit all kinds of monstrosities? Wouldn’t be surprised if this were true.
But Diaz saves his most heartfelt regard for the victims. Hugo Haniway (Piolo Pascual) is a poet and writer, his wife Lorena (Shaina Magdayao) a doctor. It’s an odd relationship: we first see Hugo reciting poetry at a party but when it comes to the issue of his wife wanting to leave for the province to practice medicine among the rural poor he’s mute; he has to leave his wife a note at his typewriter that (presumably) his wife will find and read (luckily she does). Intentional or not, the moment recalls Kubrick’s The Shining, where another wife also looks over her estranged husband’s typewriter and has an epiphany about his inner state of mind — though in Kubrick’s film this drives a permanent wedge between husband and wife, in Diaz’s film it brings them briefly together before their possibly final parting.
When Lorena leaves Hugo falls apart; he takes to drinking and resists the help of even his most loyal friends (Angel Aquino as Anghelita — yes the characters’ names are a little too spot-on, but isn’t that common practice in a rock opera?). To be honest, Hugo is a self-obsessed prick; this is really his story, how he pulls his head out of his — sorry, himself out of his abysmal sense of self-pity — realizing that not only his wife but his country need him.
And it isn’t just that Hugo (Les Miserables much?) is Diaz’s idealized poet-warrior slowly undergoing a political awakening; the long hair, fringe beard, and mustache suggest an autobiographical sketch, Hugo’s mix of righteous idealism and brooding self-destructiveness being Diaz’s way of criticizing not just Duterte’s narcissistic machismo but his more artistic kind of narcissism, his more intellectual kind of machismo. The Tenyente puts it bluntly to Hugo: “your kind of words and verses are useless in a dumb country.” Could Diaz be anticipating the antipathy with which his work will be received by fellow Filipinos — perhaps receiving it with masochistic resignation?
Shaina Magdayao’s Lorena is Hugo’s polar opposite: bright where he is dark, fearless where he pauses and ponders. She matches the soldiers’ energy with her own, a fiery little flame of conscience that questions the powers that be, though not her own undoubting self. When she’s captured and tormented and fed a bit of an unidentified drink something interesting emerges, a more wanton sensual self. The song sung during this difficult-to-watch scene is titled “Talampunay Blues” which is instructive: talampunay is a beautiful tubular flower that hangs upside-down and is often called, alternately, “angel’s trumpet” or “devil’s trumpet”; stories of its effects range from mild hallucinations to insanity, mind control, death (it’s difficult to find authoritative info). Could the drink have made her susceptible to the soldiers’ will? Or could it have released something inside her, something she’d kept hidden under all that goodness and unimpeachable marital fidelity? One thinks troubled, troubling thoughts, and keeps them to oneself.
The songs are lovely but lose considerable power in the subtitles (Pag-gising mo sa isang umaga / Walang kasamang nakaabang / Walang kaibigang naghihintay / Nauulila ka sa iyong pag-iisa (One morning you wake / with no one to welcome you / Not even a waiting friend / You’re orphaned in your solitude) — not only is the rhythm lost, but the Tagalog is more intense, more specific, captures a more pungent flavor of loneliness. Worse is having them written out instead of sung — you lose the performer’s emotional delivery, above all Bituin Escalante’s wonderful Kwentista (Storyteller). Most of the voices range from adequate (Pascual’s) to professional (Magdayao’s, Amador’s); Escalante’s soars like a kite in a stormcloud sky. Felt like I could listen to another four hour of Diaz’s songs sans instruments easy, if and only if Escalante were willing to sing them to me.
The film ends (skip the rest of this paragraph if you haven’t seen the picture!) with The Tenyente inflicting her cruelest, most cunning humiliation on Hugo, in the form of a revolver. Hugo, pushed and tortured as far as he can go, is given a choice: to honor his word and (in The Tenyente’s perverse terms) honor the memory of his raped and murdered wife; or toss all notions of honor aside, pick up the revolver, get to work. For all its nihilism, it’s possibly Lav’s most hopeful and at the same time most horrifying conclusion, offering its protagonist — offering us in effect — a chance to continue suffering. More, the film seems to suggest that if (as the old adage goes) the prey’s strength and cunning is shaped by the strength and cunning of its predator, then Marcos (and now Duterte) do serve the Philippines in their own monstrous way, as its predator-in-chief, bludgeoning down the strong and gobbling up the weak till at some point, some time, someone stands up and says “No!”
A harrowing film despite its severity, its leisurely pace, and an important one for dealing with the creatures in our midst. Easily one of the best of 2018.

Mindoro Grid submits lowest bid for Malaya

MINDORO Grid Corp. has submitted the lowest bid for the operation and maintenance service contract of the 650-megawatt (MW) Malaya thermal power plant, state-led Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM) said on Thursday.
With Mindoro Grid’s P227,040,000 bid for the one-year service contract, PSALM said it beat the P258,720,000 offer of Soosan ENS Co., Ltd., the other bidder.
The Malaya thermal plant has an approved budget of P264 million, which will be sourced from PSALM’s 2018 and 2019 corporate operating budget.
“Part of the responsibilities under the service contract include the day-to-day upkeep, management and maintenance or repair of the power plant and its equipment,” PSALM said in a statement.
PSALM said in accordance with the implementing rules and regulations of Republic Act No. 9184, or the Government Procurement Reform Act, the bidder will need to undergo post-qualification evaluation before the contract can be awarded.
The Malaya power plant is being managed by PSALM through an operation and maintenance service contract. The current operator of the power plant is STX Marine Service Co. Ltd. whose contract will expire on Aug. 24, 2018.
It was rehabilitated in 1995 by Korea Electric Power Corp. under a 15-year rehabilitate-operate-manage-maintain agreement.
The plant in Pililla, Rizal was designated in 2014 as a “must-run” unit by the Department of Energy. A must-run plant “is compelled to run and provide the needed power supply as deemed necessary to ensure reliability of power supply in the Luzon grid, especially in times of supply shortfall, system security and voltage support,” PSALM said.
Earlier this month, the agency said eight companies had expressed interest in the bidding, and three of them had bought bid documents. — Victor V. Saulon

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