‘Heneral Luna’: Of chalk, paintbrush, sword and gun

‘Heneral Luna’: Of chalk, paintbrush, sword and gun

Heneral Luna, the new film from Jerrold Tarog, is our Movie of the Week. In the space of a few articles and thought pieces, we hope to bring more insight to the film. Here’s to recounting our viewing of the film and how it defines heroism in the Philippines.

…ikaw ang tahanan ng aking puso
ang puno’t dulo ng buhay ko
mangangarap hanggang makakayanan
mananaginip hanggang kamatayan….

Before I present my defense of the film, I want to say that my mother is a teacher in one of the remotest places in Iloilo, so I grew up amid diverse culture, distance and have true affection for it and great respect for people who goes beyond their respective career. I can only say that my goal is to increase the number of teachers, social workers and heroes to walk kilometers, trek to reach the school that you will be teaching the hungry students learning ABC’s or die for your country.

'Heneral Luna': Of chalk, paintbrush, sword and gun

…hanggat maaari iiwas sa dahas
ngunit kung kailangan, buhay ko ma’y kabayaran
para makita kang malaya at tumitig nang payapa
mabuhay sa mundong ito, wala sa takot at gulo…

Traditionally, heroism has been most closely associated in dying for your country. Let’s put Antonio Luna in the limelight as archetypal war hero however Jose Rizal on the other hand his inclination to die for his principles is also a gallant accomplishment. Fearlessness in provision to a noble idea is not as dramatic as heroism that involves physical peril.

heneral-luna-filmpolice3

Yesterday, I got the chance to watch Heneral Luna for the second time and the feeling is tranquil the more that you engross yourself into it; you envisage yourself winding up in an actual war. Luna definitely paid the eventual value, and he paid it in the line of nationalistic responsibility. War on that point is allegedly advancing the protection of our nation; in fact I think the participation of the Filipinos in that revolution is making our nation less secure – because it was honorably and rightfully unjustified when we started it.  It doesn’t take one man (who is willing to die) to lead a nation but it is everybody’s responsibility.

You may also demonstrate to the parents the simplest techniques in order for them to pay attention to irregular menstruations, or tube blockage may occur and cause infertility levitra free in men. You can start off by drinking plenty of water to keep you hydrated which will give the required online cialis sales energy for better sexual performance. Diabetes is a slowly progressive, autoimmune disorder; associated with faulty regulation of immune system; thus, attacking and destroying insulin production http://greyandgrey.com/media/capture4/ levitra pills and/or insulin functioning. You just need to go in the first quarter Billy Cundiff buy cialis on line gave the Ravens the 10-7 lead through a field go, and Ray Rice extended it to 17-7 with a 3 yard run five minutes later. Heneral Luna, is conveying an internally unswerving message but the broad word “hero” is spontaneously connected to his statement that Philippines is never good for America. He wants the nation to know that the idea he put fort is a serious one, and the reverent acknowledgement of his ideas that is supposed to define the democracy that he wants – that’s worth fighting for.

Jerrold Tarog captures his argument in the preface of this boundless biopic film. He is telling us that world is jam-packed with angels, devils, heroes and the garbage that our inconceivable brains can visualize and convert something for the better or worse. He wants us to comprehend that everybody has the capacity to do terrible things. Our innermost hero; if enthused into feat, then we are skillful of anything.

Meanwhile the exaggeration on the heroism and patriotism on Tarog’s  Heneral Luna goes on. It isn’t the political elite that were accountable of the war against our own country; it is the unholy story that our fellow Filipinos drafted along the way. I wouldn’t be so sure that often in our history classes and textbooks leave a great deal of how history is sugarcoated.

'Heneral Luna': Of chalk, paintbrush, sword and gun

Thinking that one of the principles of heroism is amplifying the voice of the past in the noisiest times our lives where corruption, scandals, poverty, injustices (which becomes an heirloom) are widespread; Tarog empowers the ordinary people of all ages to emulate the nation of heroism.

To have this in tangible terms: to say that everyone who died in the Philippine revolution is a hero. And to think I can carefully say that some Filpinos who died during the revolution would not consider war with fellow Filipinos a respectable thing. Our determinations to record and classify heroic movement have led us to sightsee the features that come together to create heroes.

We are all born with this tremendous capacity to be anything and we get shaped by our circumstances. And do not have a recipe for creating heroes, but we have some clues based on the stories of inspiring heroes. Solidifying the heroic imagination may support to make people more aware of the fitting tests surrounded in intricate situations, while allowing the individual to have already considered, the cost of their heroic action. After seeing HENERAL LUNA; tell us what does it take to become a HERO?

…makita kang malaya
at ang 
nag-iisang panata
yayakapin, mamahalin kita
hanggang wala nang bukas!

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