Four families live in the seams of Manila’s busiest international port. They are migrants from the Philippine countryside who have ended up among the bottom quarter of the capital city’s population. Each day they witness the movement of wealth across nations in the form of cargo ships entering and leaving Manila’s shores.

 

Their lives continue to move with time. Anne gives birth to her third child. Akira learns reading and writing while foraging for scrap metal and coal. Eddie entertains himself to sleep with a broken TV before another night shift in the port. Emelita prays over the funeral of her husband. Around them and their days, the port is slowly expanding. Anne’s midwife, Paning, brings the news.

 

In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a filmic symphony depicting the increasing everyday violence as a city aspires for globalization. It captures imprints of the larger world in four tiny homes, showing a global process from the perspective of everyday life.

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Four families live in the seams of Manila’s busiest international port. They are migrants from the Philippine countryside who have ended up among the bottom quarter of the capital city’s population. Each day they witness the movement of wealth across nations in the form of cargo ships entering and leaving Manila’s shores.

 

Their lives continue to move with time. Anne gives birth to her third child. Akira learns reading and writing while foraging for scrap metal and coal. Eddie entertains himself to sleep with a broken TV before another night shift in the port. Emelita prays over the funeral of her husband. Around them and their days, the port is slowly expanding. Anne’s midwife, Paning, brings the news.

 

In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a filmic symphony depicting the increasing everyday violence as a city aspires for globalization. It captures imprints of the larger world in four tiny homes, showing a global process from the perspective of everyday life.

Awards and Festivals

(Selection)

Best Documentary | Human Rights Section 

Festival Internacional de Cine Documental de Buenos Aires (Argentina)

Best Documentary | Feature-length | Film Festival Dokumenter Jogjakarta (Indonesia)

Best Documentary | 42nd Gawad Urian (Philippines)

 

Best Picture & Best Cinematography | 29th Young Critics Circle Awards (Philippines)

Best Documentary & Best Director | Mindanao Film Festival (Philippines)

International Programme | DokLeipzig (Germany)

Wide Angle Competition | Busan International Film Festival (South Korea)

 

Asian Vision | Singapore International Film Festival (Singapore)

Official Selection | Hong Kong International Film Festival (Hong Kong)

Official Selection | Doxa International Documentary Festival (Canada)

Asian Vision | Taiwan International Documentary Festival (Taiwan)

Best Documentary

Human Rights Section 

Festival Internacional de Cine Documental de Buenos Aires

(Argentina)

 

Best Documentary

 Feature-length 

Film Festival Dokumenter Jogjakarta

(Indonesia)

 

Best Documentary 

42nd Gawad Urian

(Philippines)

 

Best Picture & Best Cinematography 

29th Young Critics Circle Awards

(Philippines)

 

 

 

Best Documentary & Best Director 

Mindanao Film Festival

(Philippines)

 

International Programme 

DokLeipzig

(Germany)

 

Wide Angle Competition 

Busan International Film Festival

(South Korea)

 

Asian Vision

Singapore International Film Festival

(Singapore)

 

 

 

Official Selection

Hong Kong International Film Festival

(Hong Kong)

 

Official Selection

Doxa International Documentary Festival

(Canada)

 

Asian Vision

Taiwan International Documentary Festival

(Taiwan)

 

 

 

International Competition | Jean Rouch International Film Festival (France)

Panorama | Africa International Film Festival (Nigeria)

Asian Competition | Jogja-Netpac Asian Film Festival (Indonesia)

International Competition | Tertio Millenio Film Festival (Italy)

 

SAC ASEAN International Film Festival (Thailand)

Kota Kinabalu International Film Festival (Malaysia)

Moving Borders, Films in the Center | Cinemarehiyon Film Festival (Philippines)

Main Competition | Maginhawa Film Festival (Philippines)

 

Cinemaralita Film Festival (Philippines)

Active Vista Film Festival (Philippines)

Exhibition | Seoul Biennale of Architecture and Urbanism (South Korea)

International Competition 

Jean Rouch International Film Festival

(France)

 

Panorama 

Africa International Film Festival

(Nigeria)

 

Asian Competition 

Jogja-Netpac Asian Film Festival

(Indonesia)

 

International Competition

Tertio Millenio Film Festival

(Italy)

 

 

 

SAC ASEAN International Film Festival

(Thailand)

 

Kota Kinabalu International Film Festival

(Malaysia)

 

Moving Borders, Films in the Center 

Cinemarehiyon Film Festival

(Philippines)

 

Main Competition

Maginhawa Film Festival

(Philippines)

 

 

 

Cinemaralita Film Festival

(Philippines)

 

Active Vista Film Festival

(Philippines)

 

Exhibition 

Seoul Biennale of Architecture and Urbanism

(South Korea)

 

 

 

Director's Note

In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a story about the lives of four families and thousands others like them who came from  the countryside to the port district of Tondo, Manila, trying the city’s promise of better chances. 

 

Like them, I too, was a newcomer to the city, and during my stay in the area, had easily sensed Tondo’s contradictions. The density of milieu was hard to miss, but could take a while to comprehend. What had been immediately perplexing to me was how the Tondo of our history books had turned into a settlement for the country’s poorest. Tondo, as taught in school, is the birthplace of both the liberation movement and its founding father, who also paved the conditions for the establishment of the Philippine Republic. 

 

Increasingly moved by this irony, I found myself staying in the community for two years; primarily as a social worker, but also as a wanderer trying to disentangle the ironies of a nation that is now ours but also has always been hardly so. 

 

In the good years of my youth, I was living, discussing, and solving community problems with mothers, workers, and young people, and day by day arriving at an understanding of the depths of our subjection to multiple layers of colonialism that have far outlived their supposed conclusions. I had almost forgotten my urge to make films.

 

Soon, pushed by the increasing pressure of global trade, the premier international port surrounding Tondo was signed for privatization, and along with it was a blueprint for the port’s expansion. Thousands were to be displaced in the process. Meanwhile, the traffic of container vans from China, Europe, and the US became busier and busier.

 

Change of this scale is rarely abrupt or arbitrary. There is a system to it—perhaps the same system that is displayed in the precise movements of every wheel and crane that powers this vast port industry. Hence, while irony and nostalgia are the immediate feelings for me, they are not the only point. The point is a persistent cross-sectioning, even to painful detail, of the aspects of this situation that bears imprints of a colonial past and patterns to a bleak future.

 

In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a montage of observations that confronts slices of people’s lives with slices of an industrial expansion pushed by global trade. The characters are many but, in effect, only two—the place of industry and the people surrounded and permeated by it. And while the film refers to a momentous reality, its point of view is up close, lingering in the time of waiting, in the lethargy of survival, aware and at the same time oblivious of what awaits. 

 

How does life go on in the exhaust pipes of globalization? How do people fight for daily subsistence as a historical force more supreme is taking place? If in the beginning I was drawn by Tondo’s past, now I am drawn by its future—and a question of what it represents for me, for us, and for the rest of the so-called  “developing world” in the face of an established order of supremacy that is as certain as it is volatile.

 

 

Director’s Interviews

 

Jewel Maranan on Sa Palad ng Dantaong Kulang and Creativity

 

Hong Kong Documentary Initiative’s Dialogue with Jewel Maranan, moderated By Ruby Yang

 

Q&A with Jewel Maranan By DoQ
Moderated by Prof. Patrick Campos

The Director

Jewel Maranan is a documentary filmmaker, producer, and cinematographer whose creative documentaries explore how history inches through ordinary life. Her directing and producing works, crafted in this pursuit, have been screened and awarded in international film festivals and art events: Tondo, Beloved (Philippines, 2011), In the Claws of a Century Wanting (Philippines, 2017), The Future Cries Beneath Our Soil (Vietnam, Philippines, 2018), and The Silhouettes (Iran, Philippines, 2020).

 

Aside from her filmmaking, she organized pioneering cinema initiatives in the Philippines such as the Daang Dokyu Film Festival, Nation in Visions Film Festival, and the Alternative Cinema Initiatives Conference. 

 

She is the founder and manager of Cinema Is Incomplete, an alternative film center with projects in the Philippines and the Asian region, and is co-founder of the newly established Filipino Documentary Society, a non-profit organization pushing for documentary filmmaking in the Philippines. 

 

Her films and initiatives have received support from Sundance, Visions sud est, Asian Network of Documentary, Ford Foundation, Doha Film Institute, Purin Foundation, Movies That Matter, and IDFA Bertha Fund, among others.

 

She obtained her undergraduate degree from the University of the Philippines Film Institute and her master’s degree in documentary directing from DocNomads Joint European Masters in Lisbon, Budapest and Brussels. She attended the Berlinale Talents DocStation and Doha Film Institute’s Qumra. She teaches as a senior lecturer at the University of the Philippines Film Institute.

Director's Filmography and Other Works
(Selection)

IN THE CLAWS OF A CENTURY WANTING

Documentary | 120 mins. | 2017

Directed and produced by Jewel Maranan

 

TONDO, BELOVED: TO WHAT ARE THE POOR BORN?

Documentary | 74 mins. | 2012

Directed and produced by Jewel Maranan

 

THE FUTURE CRIES BENEATH OUR SOIL

Documentary | 96 mins. | 2018

Directed by Pham Thu Hang | Produced by Jewel Maranan

 

THE SILHOUETTES

Documentary | 79mins. | 2020

Directed by Afsaneh Salari | Produced by Jewel Maranan

 

 

DAANG DOKYU FILM FESTIVAL (2020)

Festival Director

 

NATION IN VISIONS Vol. 1 (2019)

Festival Director

 

ALTERNATIVE CINEMA INITIATIVES CONFERENCE (2019)

Conference Director

Cast and Crew

Directed by

Jewel Maranan

 

Produced by

Jewel Maranan

 

Cinematography

Jewel Maranan

 

Editing

Lawrence S. Ang

Jewel Maranan

 

Production Sound

and Assistant Director

Francis Raphael Solajes

 

Website

Paolo Lorenzo

A. dela Rosa

 

Sound Design and Mixing

Mikael Andres Quizon

Kat Salinas

Danjo Galapon

 

Colorist

Biba Abiera

Protagonists

Ritchel Anne Labial

Michael Aboganda

Michael “Micheal Liit” Labial Jr.

Michaela “Tisay” Labial

Marvin “Akira” Arcillas

Mery Rose “Kirara” Arcillas

Mery Jane Arcillas

Nanay Arcillas

Eddie Gasita

Jive “Jebjeb” Gasita

Belen Gasita

Silveria “Paning” Mori

 

Production Label

Cinema Is Incomplete

 

Co-Producer

Ingmar Trost

Sutor Kolonko

Line Producers

Bianka Bernabe

Stephanie Santos

 

Researchers

Leo Gonzales

Brigitte Anne Perez

 

Associate Editor

Carlo Francisco Manatad

 

Assistant Editors

Rob Jara

Ma. Estela Paiso

Rosario Revuelta

Shaine Robles

Pao Sancho

Benjo Ferrer

Lead Production Associates

Leo Gonzales

Brigitte Anne Perez

Pao Sancho

 

Production Assistant

Ken Ervin Opina

 

Produced with support from:

National Commission for Culture and the Arts

Doha Film Institute

Film und Medienstiftung NRW

Asian Network of Documentary

 

Developed with support from:

Berlinale Talents Doc Station

Crossing Borders – European Documentary Network

AND Clinic

Docs by the Sea

Trailer

SYNOPSIS
Four families live in the seams of Manila's busiest international port. They are migrants from the Philippine countryside who have ended up among the bottom quarter of Manila's population. In the hours of their ordinary days, they hear and see, the wealth of different nations packed as cargo, passing them by, leaving and entering Manila's shores. Anne gives birth to her third child. Akira learns reading and writing while foraging for scrap metal and coal. Eddie entertains himself to sleep with a broken TV before another nightshift work as a stevedore in the port. Emelita prays over the funeral of her husband. Around them and their days, the port is slowly expanding. Anne’s midwife, Paning, brings the news. In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a filmic symphony depicting the increasing everyday violence in the aspiration for a city fit for globalization. It captures a global process from the perspective of everyday life. In the everyday of four small homes, the film traces imprints of the larger world.
About the Director
Jewel Maranan is a documentary filmmaker, producer and cinematographer whose creative documentaries explore how history inches through ordinary life. Her directing and producing works, crafted in this pursuit, have been screened and awarded in international film festivals and art events–Tondo, Beloved (Philippines, 2011), In the Claws of a Century Wanting (Philippines, 2017), The Future Cries Beneath Our Soil (Vietnam, Philippines, 2018), and The Silhouettes (Iran, Philippines, 2020). Aside from her filmmaking, she organized pioneering cinema initiatives in the Philippines such as the Daang Dokyu Film Festival, Nation in Visions Film Festival and the Alternative Cinema Initiatives Conference. She is the founder and manager of Cinema Is Incomplete, an alternative film center with projects in the Philippines and the Asian region, and is the co-founder of the newly established Filipino Documentary Society. Her films and initiatives have received support from Sundance, Visions sud est, Asian Network of Documentary, Ford Foundation, Doha Film Institute, Purin Foundation, Movies That Matter and IDFA Bertha Fund, among others. She graduated from the University of the Philippines Film Institute and DocNomads Joint European Masters in Lisbon, Budapest and Brussels. She is also an alumna of the Berlinale Talents DocStation and Doha Film Institute’s Qumra and teaches as a senior lecturer at the University of the Philippines Film Institute.
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SYNOPSIS
Four families live in the seams of Manila's busiest international port. They are migrants from the Philippine countryside who have ended up among the bottom quarter of Manila's population. In the hours of their ordinary days, they hear and see, the wealth of different nations packed as cargo, passing them by, leaving and entering Manila's shores. Anne gives birth to her third child. Akira learns reading and writing while foraging for scrap metal and coal. Eddie entertains himself to sleep with a broken TV before another nightshift work as a stevedore in the port. Emelita prays over the funeral of her husband. Around them and their days, the port is slowly expanding. Anne’s midwife, Paning, brings the news. In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a filmic symphony depicting the increasing everyday violence in the aspiration for a city fit for globalization. It captures a global process from the perspective of everyday life. In the everyday of four small homes, the film traces imprints of the larger world.
About the Director
Jewel Maranan is a documentary filmmaker, producer and cinematographer whose creative documentaries explore how history inches through ordinary life. Her directing and producing works, crafted in this pursuit, have been screened and awarded in international film festivals and art events–Tondo, Beloved (Philippines, 2011), In the Claws of a Century Wanting (Philippines, 2017), The Future Cries Beneath Our Soil (Vietnam, Philippines, 2018), and The Silhouettes (Iran, Philippines, 2020). Aside from her filmmaking, she organized pioneering cinema initiatives in the Philippines such as the Daang Dokyu Film Festival, Nation in Visions Film Festival and the Alternative Cinema Initiatives Conference. She is the founder and manager of Cinema Is Incomplete, an alternative film center with projects in the Philippines and the Asian region, and is the co-founder of the newly established Filipino Documentary Society. Her films and initiatives have received support from Sundance, Visions sud est, Asian Network of Documentary, Ford Foundation, Doha Film Institute, Purin Foundation, Movies That Matter and IDFA Bertha Fund, among others. She graduated from the University of the Philippines Film Institute and DocNomads Joint European Masters in Lisbon, Budapest and Brussels. She is also an alumna of the Berlinale Talents DocStation and Doha Film Institute’s Qumra and teaches as a senior lecturer at the University of the Philippines Film Institute.
Slide 2 Heading
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Previous
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