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Reviews1
madeleineong's rating
Ulan offers something fresh and original to the local industry. Weaving elements of magic realism, environmental consciousness, and the quest for a "perfect" love, Ulan brings to the table a beautifully-told spectacle that defies genres and challenges the viewers preconceptions on how stories should be told.
From a very young age, Lustre's character Maya has been exposed to and fascinated about idealized love - that love of her long-gone parents, her superstitious grandmother, the tikbalangs, of a childhood crush. As she grows older and meets (and re-meets) potential romantic partners, she grows weary and cynical about her chances of finding this love she once believed is meant for her. And therein lies the issue - growing up in a household and in a country where love is probably the central narrative, is there really any way real life can measure up to the stories that have captured our collective consciousness?
The film subverts the tropes common in the romance genre, and in doing so leads us to a conclusion that the choice to love and to find love can never be the happy endings in fairy tales and the gimmicky resolutions in rom-coms. Instead, helped by the lens of magic realism and the philosophy of a perpetually melancholic woman, we find that we are simply products of the values and stories that we grow up with; to truly love is to surrender to the forces we cannot control and to create meaning with those that we can.
Love, then, is coming to terms with the fact that disaster can strike anytime; it is also the steps we make to become resilient and reduce the risks associated with acts of nature, as bluntly pointed out by the anthropomorphic typhoon in the film. It is also the choice to not take what we have for granted; accepting the offer to finally eat some thrice-heated adobo with family. It may also be the acceptance and self-love that is often neglected, and forgiving your younger self for creating standards that are impossible to surpass. All this happens in the background of rain - drizzling, pouring, thrashing, sometimes soothing - that creates an atmosphere of familiarity and contentment.
Ulan is one film that should not be missed - it is a story that pushes the boundaries of romance, coming-of-age, and self-love, in a package that showcases the strength of current cinema and providing hope for a future generation that pays close attention to the stories they give importance to.
From a very young age, Lustre's character Maya has been exposed to and fascinated about idealized love - that love of her long-gone parents, her superstitious grandmother, the tikbalangs, of a childhood crush. As she grows older and meets (and re-meets) potential romantic partners, she grows weary and cynical about her chances of finding this love she once believed is meant for her. And therein lies the issue - growing up in a household and in a country where love is probably the central narrative, is there really any way real life can measure up to the stories that have captured our collective consciousness?
The film subverts the tropes common in the romance genre, and in doing so leads us to a conclusion that the choice to love and to find love can never be the happy endings in fairy tales and the gimmicky resolutions in rom-coms. Instead, helped by the lens of magic realism and the philosophy of a perpetually melancholic woman, we find that we are simply products of the values and stories that we grow up with; to truly love is to surrender to the forces we cannot control and to create meaning with those that we can.
Love, then, is coming to terms with the fact that disaster can strike anytime; it is also the steps we make to become resilient and reduce the risks associated with acts of nature, as bluntly pointed out by the anthropomorphic typhoon in the film. It is also the choice to not take what we have for granted; accepting the offer to finally eat some thrice-heated adobo with family. It may also be the acceptance and self-love that is often neglected, and forgiving your younger self for creating standards that are impossible to surpass. All this happens in the background of rain - drizzling, pouring, thrashing, sometimes soothing - that creates an atmosphere of familiarity and contentment.
Ulan is one film that should not be missed - it is a story that pushes the boundaries of romance, coming-of-age, and self-love, in a package that showcases the strength of current cinema and providing hope for a future generation that pays close attention to the stories they give importance to.