Thursday, April 28, 2011

IDELUT 2011: Basag-Tuka Update


Teasers are over, maybe it's time for a short word.

Basag-Tuka is a short animation feature that tells about the story of the brutal world of Sabong (cockfight), perceived from the eyes of the fighter itself. From the molding of the warrior to the life-deciding bouts, and ultimately the philosophy of fighting. Is life itself worth the answer? Written and illustrated by Erik Katukomal, art directed by Jocelyn Recibe, Maruk Sarsa and Jerking Pingol and animated by Dudz Clotario and Christopher Marasigan. Slashing this May.

SPOT Film Series: TAXI


Another installment from SPOT Film Series, Taxi is now up for net viewing. Concept and over-all direction is by Christopher Marasigan. Here's a short word from the film maker:

Ang "taxi" ay mukhang parte na lamang ng ating pang araw-araw na buhay, subalit maaari itong sumalamin sa maraming aspeto ng buhay nating mga Pilipino. Barako, magulo, labo labo, ang kalsada ay para sa lahat! minsan sa sobrang bilis baka may mga kailangan tayong balikan... :)
The film showcases superb edit-to-music and water color treatment, but what does it really want to say? Chris said he wants the viewer to mold his own message. More to come. :-)

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

IDELUT 2011 Project 01: BASAG-TUKA

The updated version of the standing title card for the short animation feature Basag-Tuka.Final title design, final illustrations.
The title is final. The look has been decided. The illustrations are all done. Basag-Tuka is now in the animation process. It's coming this May.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

SPOT Film Series

Here is the first set of Idelut short films for this year, done by Christopher Marasigan under the umbrella of Spot Film Series. In these vignettes, the Filipino Holy Week culture is presented. The cinematography and visual presentation is unquestionable, yet the very message will leave you full of questions.




Marasigan said there are more to come. I'm just sure we'll all be waiting.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

IDELUT 2011 Project 01


Here is a peek at what keeps me busy for a while. A short project with my group--  IDELUT. I'll be uploading more illustrations soon. This blog is becoming more and more an illustration blog. Keep watching :D

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

PROTO-ZAP W.I.P. --Update


Here's a sample page of my Proto-ZAP! comics. This project eats up most of my time these days that's why post in this blog are not so regular. Now, he's serious!

A WAKE-UP CALL FOR US ALL

This article was originally posted as a note in facebook by Ms. Monique Wilson. As an artist, I felt responsible to disseminate this message as wide as I can. This is a wake-up call for us people who believe in the power of media. Media can help our evolution (at least in mind), but used the wrong way it could mark where we stop walking. Here is the whole article, share it and take action.

A CALL TO MY FELLOW ARTISTS IN THE PHILIPPINES

by Monique Wilson on Wednesday, March 30, 2011 at 12:12am
A CALL TO MY FELLOW ARTISTS  by Monique Wilson


The debate is no longer whether it was child abuse or not. The facts are plain to see. No one with a sense of respect for another human being can dispute that. The discourse now is how we, as Filipinos, as artists involved in the same industry that created Willy and shows like his, could have allowed this to go on for as long as it has.  And what is our individual and collective participation in it?

Let’s talk honestly about our TV networks.  The culprit now is TV5 – with its’ blatant lack of decency by even hiring someone like Willy Revillame – a callous, insensitive individual who preys on the needs of poor, uneducated Filipinos.  They hired him for ratings and money at the expense of the integrity, dignity and self-respect of the most vulnerable in our society. Now wasn’t channel 2 guilty of the very same thing?  Let’s observe very closely many other game shows and reality shows across all the networks – can we not deduce very overt similarities? That networks are propelled by greed – ratings, money? Is there really, in all honesty, a local network, that can claim they put human values above all that?  I don’t think so. I turn on the television to watch local shows and I feel uncomfortable.  We have news reports that are horrifyingly biased and sensationalist, we have noon- time variety shows that exploit women and insult our intelligence, we have talk shows that are intrusive, subjective and tasteless – the list goes on and on. I am not saying, of course, that all shows fall beneath our standards of human decency – there are some TV shows that go against the grain, break the boundaries and give us quality – but they are so few. Even how the networks create the demarcation lines – A and B for middle and upper class, C and D for lower class? What kind of senseless segregating is that? It’s like saying, depending on what “class” you belong to, you cannot “appreciate” certain kinds of shows.  This insults me as it should insult everybody. This is one of the roots of the problem.  ALL our TV networks dumb down audiences in one way or the other.  They keep the lines segregated. TV, like any other cultural form – and let’s face it, TV has become our common culture in the Philippines – should be used to EDUCATE, EMPOWER, INSPIRE, AWAKEN.  But when you see shows like “Willing Willie” – and many other similar shows – they do the opposite. They dumb down audiences. They disempower them by creating a mendicant society with game shows that promise “quick money”. They keep them dependent on hand- outs, instead of creating opportunities for them to build skills. There is nothing inspiring about this.

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Old Works: Daredevil Yellow


Did this piece July last year. I was attempting to illustrate Marvel Superheroes in their classic costumes. But unfortunately I wasn't able to squeeze-in some time. Hopefully I could, this year. :-D

Saturday, April 02, 2011

DOTA: Centaur

A sample sketch I did recently for a supposed-to-be commissioned work. Changed a wee-bit of details, since my reference was low-res.