Cinemalaya 21 hails 'Bloom Where You Are Planted' best film; Rochelle Pangilinan, Mylene Dizon receive acting awards
Directed by Noni Abao, BLOOM WHERE YOU ARE PLANTED was cited for “its powerful and deeply humane portrayal of political activists uprooted by violence yet steadfast in their pursuit of justice and belonging; for transforming the struggle for land, peace, and dignity in Cagayan Valley into a meditation on home, hope, and resilience."
Meanwhile, Carl Joseph Papa’s THE NEXT 24 HOURS won Best Film in the Short Film Category for “its hauntingly tender portrayal of trauma and survival; for rendering silence, fear, and resilience through rotoscope animation with profound sensitivity and compassion; for using art as advocacy to give voice to those still struggling to speak.”
Best Director Balanghai trophies go to filmmakers Sari Dalena and Elian Idioma. For her film CINEMARTYRS, director Dalena has shown “her bold and visionary authorship that fuses cinema, history, and haunting memory into a singular act of resistance; for reclaiming women’s voices within the nation’s buried traumas through guerrilla filmmaking that is both mystical and political.”
Director Idioma, on the other hand, takes home his first Balanghai trophy for I’M BEST LEFT INSIDE MY HEAD for “its deft control of tone, emotional precision, and psychological depth; for transforming a young man’s haunting homecoming to his former orphanage into a meditation on guilt, privilege, and belonging rendered with remarkable sensitivity and vision, the award
CHILD NO. 82 won Best Screenplay in the Full-Length Category. Writers Tim Rone Villanueva and Herlyn Alegre were commended for their “witty and poignant writing that turns a son’s desperate longing to meet his legendary father into a journey of truth and self-discovery; for peeling away the myth of a larger-than-life movie idol to reveal the fragile heart of fatherhood.”
Handiong Kapuno’s FIGAT received the Best Screenplay award in the Short Film Category for “its sheer authenticity, lyrical storytelling, and cultural depth, for its powerful affirmation of indigenous identity amid modern distractions, and for its heartfelt portrayal of a young Kalinga girl preserving her heritage through music.”
The NETPAC (Network for the Promotion of Asia Pacific Cinema) Award for Best Film in the Full-Length Category went to REPUBLIKA NG PIPOLIPINAS by Renei Dimla, for “its powerful story about resistance, citizenship, and the search for belonging. The film stands out for its courage, creativity, and heart.”
For the Short Film Category, HASANG by Daniel De La Cruz takes home the NETPAC Award for “its tender, poetic work that blurs the line between myth and memory, and between the real and the spiritual with remarkable restraint. The film stands out for its delicate storytelling, stunning visual simplicity, and deep spiritual resonance.”
HABANG NILALAMON NG HYDRA ANG KASAYSAYAN took home three major acting awards.
Actor Jojit Lorenzo won Best Performance of An Actor for “his restrained yet piercing portrayal of a political strategist confronting disillusionment and moral exhaustion in a nation consumed by lies; for embodying the quiet despair and stubborn hope of a man searching for meaning amid history’s erasure.”
While Tanghalang Pilipino artistic director Nanding Josef was recognized as Best Performance of a Supporting Actor for “his chilling yet deeply human portrayal of a once-feared Martial Law general now fading into the fog of dementia; for embodying both the terror of tyranny and the fragility of remorse.”
Actress Mylene Dizon won the award for Best Performance of An Actress. Dizon was praised for “her searing and compassionate portrayal of a daughter haunted by the sins of her father—a onetime enforcer of a brutal regime—yet bound to protect him in his frailty; for embodying a conscience torn between love, guilt, and moral reckoning.”
Rochelle Pangilinan for CHILD NO. 82 was recognized as Best Performance of a Supporting Actress for “her restrained yet searing portrayal of a mother holding her dignity amid abandonment and illusion; for embodying both the ache of loss and the quiet strength of survival as she watches her son chase the myth of a father who was never there.”
Technical awards include:
BEST EDITING – Che Tagyamon and Arnex Nicolas (BLOOM WHERE YOU ARE PLANTED), for “its seamless weaving of testimonies, memories, and silences into a resonant tapestry of truth; for transforming the stories of the detained, the disappeared, and the fallen into a cohesive and deeply affecting chronicle of courage.”
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY – Theo Lozada (RAGING), for “its evocative interplay of light and shadow that mirrors a young man’s silence and awakening; for capturing the humid stillness of Romblon’s seas and forests as landscapes of both trauma and truth.”
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – Jeric Delos Angeles (PADAMLÁGAN), for “transforming archival fragments, survivor testimonies, and lived spaces into a seamless visual world where fiction and history converge; for reconstructing 1972 Naga City with both authenticity and reverence — from the fluvial devotion of Peñafrancia to the ruins of the Colgante Bridge — and for crafting a setting that honors memory as much as it reveals loss."
BEST MUSICAL SCORING – Teresa Barrozo (CINEMARTYRS), for “its inspired fusion of ethnic Mindanao rhythms and cinematic nostalgia; for weaving ancestral memory with the lyricism of old Tagalog screen romances to deepen a film on colonial violence and female artistry.”
BEST SOUND – Lamberto Casas, Jr. (RAGING), for “its immersive soundscape that transforms silence, sea, and sorrow into an echo of buried trauma; for amplifying the unspoken anguish of a young man whose cry for help is met with indifference, deepening his isolation and pain.”
BEST ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE – The cast of OPEN ENDINGS by Nigel Santos and Keavy Eunice Vicente, for “the seamless chemistry, emotional depth, and playful vitality of four performances that breathe life into a rare story of chosen family and intimacy; and for capturing with honesty, humor, and grace the enduring bonds between queer women navigating love, loss, and friendship.” The ensemble was composed of actresses Jasmine Curtis-Smith, Janella Salvador, Klea Pineda, and Leanne Mamonong
The Special Jury Prize winners were CINEMARTYRS by Sari Dalena, cited for “transforming the act of filmmaking itself into a gesture of remembrance and revolt, for fusing guerrilla filmmaking, mysticism, and archival memory to confront the ghosts of violence—both historical and cinematic—with conviction, and for her luminous homage to the first women filmmakers of Philippine cinema who turned art into testimony.”; and KAY BASTA ANGKARABO YAY BAGAY IBAT HA LANGIT (OBJECTS DO NOT RANDOMLY FALL FROM THE SKY) by Maria Estela Paiso, cited for “its fearless vision, poetic fury, and striking fusion of myth and memory; for transforming the West Philippine Sea’s wounds into a powerful cinematic allegory of sovereignty and rage.”
CHILD NO. 82 by Tim Rone Villanueva and ASCENSION FROM THE OFFICE CUBICLE by Hannah Silvestre won the hearts of the Cinemalaya theater goers and audiences, receiving the Audience Choice Award for Full-Length and Short Film categories, respectively.
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