WINNER
of Best Film - Asian Festival of 1st Films
WINNER of Best Feature Film - KinderFest, Glass Bear (Special
Mention) & Teddy Award - Berlin Film Festival 2006
Genre: Drama
Director: Auraeus Solito
Cast: Nathan Lopez, JR Valentin
RunTime: 1 hr 43 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Content Not Suitable For Children
Under 16)
Official Website: http://blossomingofmaximooliveros.com/
Opening
Day: The Picturehouse - 5 July 2007
Synopsis
:
Maxi, is youngest child of widower and like nearly everyone
in their Manila slum, survives by selling stolen cell phones
and placing bets. Occasionally teased but mostly accepted
as a girl in a boy's body, super-femme Maxi dropped out of
school to be surrogate "wife," cooking, cleaning
and fussing over his family of petty thieves, who love and
protect him in return. One day Maxi meets a honest, well-meaning
and handsome policeman Victor, who takes him under his wing
platonically, though vibe is near-romantic at times. Victor
inspires Maxi to hope for a better life, but when a family
friend Boy kills a student during a bungled robbery, Maxi
is caught between protecting his kin and Victor.
Movie
Review:
Growing up, a close friend of mine acted in stark
contrast to the rest of the boys. He always seemed happier,
and was more content in being dissimilar to us when it came
to our whims and petty discords that resulted from our passionate
disagreements on our favoured sports. His infectious enthusiasm
and sunny aura was well received by everyone who knew him,
making him instantly popular among our circle of friends.
And despite the occasional whisperings within the group of
parents of his oddly flamboyant nature that resulted from
his joie de vivre, nobody saw anything sinister or unwholesome
about him in the least. Even as there was an unstated opinion
that he was gay, something we suspected he knew as well, there
was always a profound sense of acceptance that existed on
a purely human level at that age.
“The
Blossoming of Maximo Oliveros” is a confrontational
family drama that resonates with sociopolitical heft. While
its 12 year-old protagonist, the lively and spirited Maxi
(Nathan Lopez) enjoys the ephemeral joys of childhood, his
older brothers and widowed father adhere to the essential
criminal elements of their slum district in Manila to make
ends meet. Maxi, a school dropout, is not unlike the friend
I told you about. They share a similar zest for life, happy
in their own pursuits and with a precocious sense of self.
Maxi
knows his family needs him to step up, as he performs the
duties that are usually synonymous with that of a mother or
sister. He cleans, cooks and fusses over the grown-ups in
the family, something his family adores about him. They also
don’t see anything wrong with Maxi’s cross-dressing,
androgynous appearances that are often followed with ostentatious
sashays through imaginary catwalks. Although, the film endears
to us a very young titular character that is gay in all sense
of the word, the one thing that sticks to us is the intense
devotion shared within his family unit.
From
its opening shot of establishing striking colours amidst a
canvas of squalor, we are supposed to consider Maxi’s
presence as a splash of mirth in the murky underbelly that
exists in the destitution of his surroundings of ambiguous
ideals and cutthroat subsistence. No wonder then, when Maxi
becomes enamoured with a saviour-like policeman, Victor (J
R Valentin), a hopeful beacon of right in a world of wrongs.
The film insists on showing this as Maxi’s first love,
not just a mere infatuation. In addition to its obvious taboos
relating to the ages involved, it even uses traditional cinematic
conventions of using strife at home to convey the forbidden
affections between the cop and the robbers’ kin.
Director
Auraeus Solito is especially kind in his feature debut, one
that unforgivingly invokes the volatile subject matter of
pre-teen sexuality. He situates the film in a fine way by
servicing his characters before the big ideas that one tends
to walk away with, from films of such daring. And he gratefully
steers clear from the awkwardness of similarly themed films
such as the kitschy romance shared between its young leads
in the sickeningly saccharine, “Little Manhattan”
and the morbidly obtrusive “Mysterious Skin”.
Movie
Rating:
(One of the finest Southeast Asian films of recent years)
Review by Justin Deimen
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