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Batch '81

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Wikipedia article




'Alpha Kappa Omega Batch '81' (also known as 'Batch '81' or ' 81') is a 1982 Filipino film directed by Mike de Leon, with a screenplay by de Leon, Clodualdo del Mundo, Jr., and Raquel Villavicencio. The film depicts the titular fraternity's harsh initiation of new batch members as seen through the eyes of pre-med student Sid Lucero, played by Mark Gil in what is generally recognized as his breakout role.

The film premiered at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival during the Directors' Fortnight, screened alongside de Leon's 1981 film 'Kisapmata'. Upon release, the film received critical acclaim. It was adjudged by the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino as one of the Ten Best Films of the Decade. In 2017, the film was digitally restored with the support of the Asian Film Archive, with a theatrical premiere at the 74th Venice International Film Festival as part of the Venice Classics section.

Plot



Sid Lucero (Mark Gil), a university student, is pushed by his mother to take up zoology so that he may later go on to medical school. He is attracted to the prospect of joining Alpha Kappa Omega, also called AKO, one of the school's prominent Greek-letter organizations.

Sid is one of the fraternity's fifteen initial applicants, but only eight make it into AKO's six-month initiation program, which is overseen by the fraternity seniors, called "masters" by the neophytes. The fraternity leader, Vince (Jimmy Javier), orients the pledge batch in the ways of the group before submitting them to their first hazing.

Over the succeeding months, the fraternity masters submit the neophytes to a series of tests: Pacoy Ledesma (Ward Luarca) has sex with Jenny Estrada (Chanda Romero), a prostitute, which is recorded and shown to the group. The group are made to run in public in nothing but their underwear and sneakers. Ronnie (Ricky Sandico) is made to drink beer laced with his batchmates' spit at a birthday party. A doctor, who is an AKO alum, attaches surgical equipment on Sid as a pain-tolerance experience. Sid's love interest, Mariel (Bing Pimentel), expresses concern for his safety, revealing that she lost her brother in a frat initiation rite two years before.

The physical and psychological pressures take its toll on neophytes Arni (Rod Leido) and Ronnie, both of whom decide to leave. When senior Vince discovers this, he has Ronnie tied to an electric chair for the rest of the batch to witness. Ronnie's own father (Chito Ponce Enrile), an AKO alum, oversees the session as his son is given electric shocks by his batch mates. As the voltage is set higher, much to the discomfort of the young men, Ronnie's father orders the session to continue and the neophytes obey. Pacoy notices that Ronnie is no longer responding to the questions and believes him to have died. When Ronnie suddenly wakes up, his father explains that the session was set-up to test whether the neophytes would trust their masters. Ronnie decides to continue on with the initiation, much to the delight of his batch.

At the university's inter-fraternity talent show, 'Upakan', the AKO neophytes perform a drag rendition of songs from the musical 'Cabaret', with Sid dressed as Sally Bowles. The rivaling fraternity Sigma Omicron Sigma (SOS) perform an original rock composition.

After the show, Sid, Arni, and Arni's girlfriend, Tina (Sandy Andolong), are waylaid by members of SOS. Their leader, Tina's brother Abet (Mike Arvisu), makes good on his earlier threats to stop Arni from dating his sister, drowning Arni as Sid watches. Now committed to avenging Arni's death, Sid asks AKO leader Vince to retaliate. The two fraternities break their truce and decide to settle everything in a street brawl. Ronnie is killed by an SOS member, who falls to a cleaver strike of AKO neophyte Gonzalez (Vic Lima). Gonzalez and Sid work together to kill Abet, but Gonzalez dies in the process.

After one last hazing at a beach, the remaining neophytes, including Sid, are officially welcomed into the fraternity. The closing voice-over by Sid reveals that he eventually becomes one of the AKO masters overseeing the initiation program of another batch of neophytes.

Cast



Production



Development



Producer Marichu Maceda of MVP Pictures approached Mike de Leon to direct a film for her. At that point, de Leon had directed three films, including his critically acclaimed directorial debut 'Itim', and was also known for his cinematography work on Lina Brocka's 'Manila in the Claws of Light' and Eddie Romero's 'Aguila'. After meeting Maceda, de Leon reached out to screenwriters Clodualdo del Mundo Jr. and Raquel Villavicencio, both of whom he previously worked with on 'Kakabakaba Ka Ba?'. They proposed a story that would explore the educational system in relation to contemporary society. Although Maceda claimed that the concept of a film about a fraternity came from her after her son had been beaten up by his would-be fraternity brothers, de Leon has said that he came across the culture of an underground university brotherhood from a personal friend.

According to del Mundo, some of the material for the film came from interviews with "informants" of Upsilon Sigma Phi, a fraternity based in the University of the Philippines.

Casting

A casting call was announced for the film and by December 1980 there was a shortlist for all parts except for Sid Lucero, the narrator, as de Leon did not want the role to be played by a newcomer. Producer Maceda was initially interested in casting Christopher de Leon. However, director de Leon had found the young actor difficult to work with on the set of his previous film, 'Kakabakaba Ka Ba?'. In the end, Mark Gil, a then up-and-coming actor with a reputation for being a serious performer, was chosen for the role.

Before filming began, a ten-day acting workshop was held at the residence of Maceda. It was attended by those on the shortlist, as well as established actors such as Charo Santos and Jay Ilagan, both of whom had previously worked with de Leon on 'Kakabakaba Ka Ba?' and who would work with the director again on 'Kisapmata'. Actress Alma Moreno was in attendance, having been considered for the role of Tina, but she ultimately lost out to Sandy Andolong.

Sid Lucero, the child of Gil and his 'Batch '81' co-star Bing Pimentel, credits the film as "that movie was where my dad met my mom" adding he "would not have been made if not for that movie." Lucero, born a year after the film was released, and whose real name is Timothy Pimentel Eigenmann, took his stage name from his father's character in the film.

Filming

Principal photography began in February 1981, starting with the initiation scene. In order to avoid having to get permission to film on an actual school campus, the Sampaguita Pictures lot and the LVN Pictures compound were used as filming locations. The dorm scenes were filmed at the dorm of the Sampaguita contract players, while the initiation scene was shot in the basement of the Maceda residence. Nevertheless, some scenes were shot in actual school campuses: the opening sequence was filmed at Ateneo de Manila University, while the musical performance was filmed at Colegio San Agustin.

Several months into shooting, production on 'Batch '81' came to a halt as Maceda's other film, the Vilma Santos-headlined 'Pakawalan Mo Ako', was behind schedule and eating up their financing. During the three-month hiatus, de Leon and his creative team made the psychological horror film 'Kisapmata'. Shooting resumed after Maceda was able to raise more funds. Principal photography was completed in August 1981.

Post-production

During the musical presentation, a scene was filmed where Miss Casuso, played by Nanette Inventor, performs a disco rendition of "Don't Cry For Me Argentina" from the musical 'Evita'. De Leon admitted that this was a reference to First Lady Imelda Marcos. At the time, the Marcos regime "orally banned" 'Evita' due to comparisons between Imelda and Eva Pern, the former First Lady of Argentina and the subject of 'Evita'. As such, de Leon was told by Maceda, who was a personal friend of Imelda, to choose between keeping the disco number or the Martial Law question asked during the electroshock scene. Although de Leon chose to keep the latter, the question was ultimately cut by Philippine censors prior to its Philippine theatrical release. The removal of the "Don't Cry For Me Argentina" number also prompted de Leon to cut out the story arc of Inventor's character, limiting her role to the opening scene.

This is considered the breakout film editing work of Jess Navarro, who would go on to edit de Leon's 'Kisapmata' and 'Sister Stella L.', as well as other notable films including Ishmael Bernal's 'Broken Marriage' and Peque Gallaga's 'Oro, Plata, Mata.'

Themes and allusions



The film is generally viewed as an allegory of the Martial Law era of President Ferdinand Marcos, the microcosm of the fraternity mirroring the macrocosm of Philippine society at the time. In the context of the national discourse of the period, film scholar Patrick Campos writes "by the film's end one would have witnesses the characteristic violence that attends fascism, blind obedience, and irrational conformity." Director Mike de Leon, on the occasion of the premier of the digitally restored version of the film, recounted:

Musical performance



De Leon has said that the film is meant to depict two types of fraternities: the AKO fraternity following the philosophy of the fascists, while the SOS fraternity more akin to anarchists. This is best realized in the musical presentations of the fraternities. The AKO fraternity perform in drag songs from the Nazi Germany-set musical 'Cabaret'. Meanwhile, the SOS fraternity, dressed as Alex and his droogs from Stanley Kubrick's 'A Clockwork Orange', perform an original rock composition "Upakan '81" while attacking a life-sized dummy. The detail of the dummy being beaten up was cut by the Board of Censors for Motion Pictures for the original Philippine theatrical release.

Electroshock scene

In one scene, Ronnie, one of the neophytes, is strapped into a chair, The masters command the other neophytes to ask Ronnie true-or-false questions and then press a button that would give him an electric shock. One of the attendants is Ronnie's father, an alumni of the fraternity, who asks, "Martial Law bettered the lives of Filipinos, right or wrong?" The question about the impact of Martial Law was cut by the Board of Censors for Motion Pictures for the original Philippine theatrical release. Critic Nicanor Tiongson referred to the line and its censorship in an article for 'Philippine Panorama' as "one of the few and essential lines that situate the film in a macro-level of significance." Between de Leon's early films, namely 'Kakabakaba Ka Ba?', 'Kisapmata', 'Batch '81', and 'Sister Stella L.', which all delve into sociopolitical themes, the electroshock scene contains the only direct implication of the Marcos regime. De Leon has also noted the "irony" of the scene given that Ronnie's father is played by Chito Ponce Enrile, the brother of President Marcos' Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile.

The scene was based on the psychological Milgrim experiment as de Leon wanted to demonstrate "that people will obey authority even if the consequences are serious as long as someone would take responsibility for their actions".

Ray Privett, writing for 'Film Comment', found that the electroshock scene reminded him of the Ludovico treatment in 'A Clockwork Orange', a film referenced in the SOS fraternity rock number. Similarly, Noel Vera, film critic for 'BusinessWorld', refers to 'Batch '81' as "de Leon's 'Clockwork Orange'." Beyond the overt rock number, Vera writes, "specific events are mirrored (a head dunked in a tank of filthy water; a man strapped to a chair; one film beginning with a gang rumble, the other ending with same), crucial themes echoed ("What's your decision?" recalling 'Clockwork's' onscreen query: "What's it going to be then, eh?" both films focusing on the primary and degradation of free will)."

Release



The film premiered at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival during the Directors' Fortnight, alongside de Leon's 'Kisapmata'. The invitation to Cannes came after Pierre-Henri Deleau, a festival organizer who previously brought three of Lina Brocka's films to Cannes, met de Leon at the 7th Metro Manila Film Festival, where 'Kisapmata' had swept the festival awards. In November 1982, a censored version of the film was shown in the Philippines. In attendance was presidential daughter Imee Marcos, who, according to producer Marichu Maceda, enjoyed the film.

Censorship

Before its Philippine premier, 'Batch '81' was subjected to censorship that Mario A. Hernando of 'Who Magazine' described as a "brutality of which could be matched only by those found in the uncensored film." The scenes cut from the theatrical release were the pointed question about the impact of Martial Law during the electroshock scene, several cuts of the SOS performance when they are beating up a life-sized dummy, and the violent warehouse fight towards the end of the film.

Restoration

In 2016, the Asian Film Archive reached out to Mike de Leon with the proposal of digitally restoring 'Batch '81' and his 1984 film 'Sister Stella L.' Prior to, de Leon had entrusted the uncut, original prints of the film with the Asian Film Archive, alongside the prints of his other pictures. The restoration itself was done by L'Immagine Ritrovata, the same film lab that de Leon worked with for the restoration of Lina Brocka's 'Manila in the Claws of Light' and Lamberto V. Avellana's 'Portrait of the Artist as a Filipino'. The color grading was done by Wildsound Studio, with de Leon and cinematographer Rody Lacap supervising.

On September 5, 2017, the digitally restored version of the film premiered at the 74th Venice International Film Festival as part of the Venice Classics section. De Leon prepared a speech, which was read by Tee Pao Chew of the Asian Film Archive, about Martial Law as well as the contemporary political climate of the Philippines, saying:

It was also screened at the 15th MoMA International Festival of Film Preservation at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The restored version had its Philippine premiere at Trinoma mall as the closing film of the 2017 QCinema International Film Festival.

Reception



Upon release, the film received critical acclaim. Isagani Cruz, writing for 'Philippine Panorama', said "simply put, 'Batch '81' is one of the greatest Filipino films ever made." Bienvenido Lumbera of the 'Philippine Daily Express' found it "a rare product of the Filipino film industry, polished, accomplished, disturbing, and, above all, intelligent." In a more muted review, however, Joel David noted that "more time is spent on the depiction of initiation rites than on lead character Sid Lucero's motive for membership at all costs, when it fact it is his obsession that leads to an escalation of the level of violence in the neophytes' experience."

Accolades



Adaptations



In 2019, for its 40th season, Tanghalang Ateneo, the student theater company of Ateneo de Manila University, staged an adaptation of the film. The adaptation was written and directed by Guelan Luarco, the son of Ward Luarco, who plays one of the neophytes in the film. The playwright Luarco transported the story to a contemporary setting, including references to social media, allowing the play to serve as a commentary on the current state of the country.

References



Works cited



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