So one of the few places where it was safe to be among Other People was at the movies. It was okay to sit in the dark with a bunch of complete strangers, stare at the moving images, listen to the words and music, and reveal what they made you feel. You gawked, laughed and cried together. It was one of my earliest notions of community.
The second the movie ended this community broke up into units of Other People, presumably vile and not to be trusted. If it was my father who took me to the movies we saw all the James Bonds and Bruce Lees I couldnt go to the ladies room by myself. I had to use the mens room, where my father could stand guard, and where I may have inflicted psychological scars on total strangers with my uncontrollable giggling.
I could bear it no longer.
"Its SHRAPNEL!" I informed them in a loud voice. Gail elbowed me and told me to shut up. For several seconds I waited for a fight to break out in the theater. But the moment passed, and the boys simply got up and slunk away.
There are at least as many characters in an audience as there are onscreen. Theres always some moron "explaining" the movie to his date in a loud voice and getting the plot wrong, or doing play-by-play commentary ("Hes standing up. Hes walking to the door. Hes turning the knob ") or talking on his cell phone ("What? Im at the movies! IM AT THE MOVIES!"). Theres the idiot who puts his feet up on the back of your seat or kicks your seat repeatedly, or spends the whole movie texting. They annoy the hell out of me, and I could avoid them altogether by watching movies on DVD, cable, on my computer or iPod.
Still I go to the movies. No, I insist on going to the cinema. Theres the whole ritual of getting tickets, popcorn and drinks, finding a seat, watching the trailers. And theres the audience, this frequently aggravating bunch of Other People, your community, whether you can stand them or not.
There are movies that require your undivided attention and promise some kind of epiphany about the human condition. This is not one of them. In true Filipino movie tradition, Sukob is meant to be seen with a crowd of Other People shrieking, laughing, and commenting on the action. I do not know if this is Cinema, but it is a blast. No one in the audience truly believed that the characters up on the screen were real human beings with motives and emotions. They never stopped being movie stars pretending to be caught in a supernatural crisis. The thrill of watching this movie was in guessing which star would meet her horrible end next.
Die, overpaid celebrities, die!
At the first big scare, the woman eating palabok screamed and broke her plastic fork. For the rest of the movie she managed to incorporate her dining misfortune into her running critique. "Dumidilim na, wala pa rin akong tinidor." "Patay na siya, pero gutom pa rin ako kasi walang tinidor." (Night has fallen, and I still have no fork. Hes dead, and Im still hungry because I have no fork.) And the cryptic "Aray ko, namatay lahat ng buhok kong kulot." (Ouch, my curly hairs have died.)
Instead of being infuriated by her yammering, I found that my viewing experience was enhanced by her contribution. It was like watching a movie Id seen before, but with a hilarious commentary track.
Thats when it occurred to me: The audience isnt just talking to themselves. They are literally insinuating themselves into the movie. The movie is more than a flat screen upon which images are projected; the movie is Kris, Claudine, you, me, and the woman eating palabok. We are all in this together, a community huddled in a dark space, dreaming with our eyes open.
Everyone is a movie star.
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