NOTE: This too-brief Cesar Marciano review of "Rosario" one of the entries in the December 2010 Metro Manila Film Festival, appeared on Facebook and Twitter that same festival week. Actress Liezl Sumilang-Martinez, of American-German-Filipino descent, wife of the movie's director Albert Martinez, was just one among a fine ensemble of actors who made the movie the way I saw it that time: a masterpiece of the the 118-year-old Philippine movie industry, with most filmic elements directed and mounted together to form an integral whole. It was, plainly put, a memorable collaboration by all.
Liezl was a Twitter Follower of mine, and I of her. We traded a few private messages, the most touching of which was: "Thank you, Cesar Marciano, for all the kind words you've said about Rosario."
Liezl passed away 14. March 2015 after a battle with recurrent breast cancer. "Rosario" was her last movie.
So in her memory and to thank the people who helped carry the movie to completion and earn a modest profit, as well as the few critics who were in the same page as I, here is word-for- word the capsule review. In due time, Cesar Marciano will compose the full review that "Rosario" deserves, then and now.
Anna Liza "Liezl" Sumilang-Martinez -- May she rest in peace. ......
December 2010 – CAPSULE REVIEW by Cesar Marciano
>>>ALBERT MARTINEZ's "Rosario" is a rare masterpiece of Philippine cinema, a radiant portrait of a charleston-dancing, cigarette-smoking, proto-liberated woman at the start of the country's modern era. It is a beautiful tale of a woman who died unforgiven by the people she loved. The woman, a young heiress, who studied music and the arts in New York City, fell from grace, was prosecuted as an adulteress, died penniless and was buried in a rented grave.
The film is a scrupulous and ingenuous re-creation of the 1920s and 1930s of one of the United States' few colonies, without dwelling on the politics of that time.
Heading an excellent cast, the sensuous Jennylyn Mercado in the title role gives a flawless performance, remarkable in honesty and insight.
Director Martinez hardly makes any false move, imbuing the movie with heightened realism and humanity. He is a true heir of the country's great directors such as Lino Brocka, Lamberto Avellana and Gerardo de Leon, Martinez has an instinct for visuals that recall the opulent costume epics of the Luchino Visconti era in Italy.<<<