‘Ang Kwento Nating Dalawa’ Review: Restraint and sincerity

Oggs Cruz

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‘Ang Kwento Nating Dalawa’ Review: Restraint and sincerity
''Ang Kwento Nating Dalawa' thrives given Nestor Abrogena's understated and subtle approach, writes Oggs Cruz

Nestor Abrogena’s Ang Kwento Nating Dalawa is that rare romance that successfully thrives in the lack of spectacle.

Quiet and sincere 

The film opens with Sam (Nicco Manalo) waking up late for work.

While walking to the train station, he receives a call. It’s Sarah, presumably a colleague, and she starts scolding him about his being tired, overworked, and sleep-deprived. Through their short conversation, we get a glimpse of who Sam is. He’s a filmmaker, one who’s just gotten a scholarship to study in Berlin. He hasn’t gotten to fixing all of his requirements though, because he is preoccupied. He gets on his train, sits down, and fiddles with his phone.

 

 

 

The film then cuts to a flashback. Sam is again on the train. He alights and meets up with Isa (Emmanuelle Vera), a film student. He’s late. She’s annoyed. He woos her with his very casual charm, and begins random conversations about everything. They’re back on the train, and she falls asleep. It is all very sweet in the way the two lovers have navigated their way from a cute squabble to a scene of such quiet and sincere tenderness.

 

Slow but sure 

Screengrab from YouTube/Nestor Abrogena

Everything else unfolds slowly but surely.

There is more to Sam and Isa’s love story than their random discussions about historic buildings and Kurt Cobain. Frictions appear. Complications arise. Through the low-key misunderstandings and reconciliations however, Abrogena insists on normalcy. He keeps everything feeling as ordinary as all other romantic affairs. It almost feels juvenile, with a lot of the film’s moments set within school corridors and classrooms.

The film is so restrained, so insulated, so indulgent in whispers and gestures instead of impassioned sequences of lovers kissing, fighting and saying quotable quotes as most other cinematic romances that it teeters towards pointlessness. The love story at the center of Ang Kwento Nating Dalawa however is hardly ordinary. 

Screengrab from YouTube/Nestor Abrogena

 

Abrogena cleverly plots Sam and Isa’s romance to keep the one complication that would prevent them from being perfect lovers a penultimate revelation. In so doing, he portrays what could have been a controversial relationship as a love story like any other, one that has grooves and rhythms that are immediately relatable because they are grounded not on who the lovers are but on the fallibility of their emotions with each other.

 

No judgment 

Screengrab from YouTube/Nestor Abrogena

 

The film’s biggest triumph is its insistence on covering the romance without any form of judgment, as to whether whatever they are doing is within the bounds of ethics. 

Throughout the film, Sam and Isa aren’t anything more than lovers going through the motions of a typical relationship. Sure, there are third parties involved, and friends guiding them with what they need to do, but there is never an instance wherein Abrogena exploited the complication that he only reveals in the end. Love is love, no matter who the person is and how they are related to each other. They are all prone to the ecstasy and the aches. – Rappler.com

 

Francis Joseph Cruz litigates for a living and writes about cinema for fun. The first Filipino movie he saw in the theaters was Carlo J. Caparas’ ‘Tirad Pass.’ Since then, he’s been on a mission to find better memories with Philippine cinema. 

 

 

 

 

 

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