Wherever I am, the world comes after me.
It offers me its busyness. It does not believe that I do not want it.
Now I understand 
why the old poets of China went so far
and high 
into the mountains, then crept into the pale mist.
"The Old Poets of China" by Mary Oliver

Imbisibol,” a film that “presents a narrative of daily challenges faced by Filipino migrant workers in Japan” (Imbisibol, promotional poster) will be shown during the Sinag Maynila Independent Film Festival 2015 from 18 March to 24 March 2015 in selected SM Cinemas.

The film is based on a one-act play of the same title by Herlyn Gail Alegre, a recent graduate of the Asian Center, University of the Philippines Diliman. The play is set in 1992, a time when labor migration to Japan was at its peak. The story happens one afternoon when in the middle of a happy get-together of fellow Filipinos, Rodel, a young newcomer, arrives after committing a crime he did not intend.

Imbisibol was submitted for the Virgin Labfest Year 9, an “annual festival of unpublished, unstaged, untried, and untested” one-act plays that is sponsored by, among others, the Cultural Center of the Philippines (Cultural Center of the Philippines)  Imbisibol was one of the 12 works chosen out of almost 200 entries that year. The following year, it was restaged as part of the revisited works in the Virgin Labfest Year 10.

The film is directed by Lawrence Fajardo and stars Allen Dizon, Bernardo Bernardo, Ces Quesada, and JM de Guzman. It also includes the special participation of Ricky Davao and Cynthia Luster. Like the play, it follows the life of Rodel and three other Filipinos "who are suddenly caught together in an even more complex game of hide and seek where staying invisible is the only way to survive” amidst “threats of arrest and deportation” wherein “friendships are tested, loyalties are questioned, and values are eroded.” (Imbisibol, promotional poster)

Herlyn Gail Alegre graduated Cum Laude with a degree in Creative Writing from the University of the Philippines Diliman. For her M.A. she took up Asian Studies and majored in Japanese Studies at the Asian Center, University of the Philippines Diliman.  She wrote her MA thesis on the "Dorimu Boi," using visual and discourse analysis to understand Japanese pop idol masculinity. At present, she is taking her Ph.D. in International Studies at Waseda University in Tokyo, and her dissertation related to migrants in Japan.

Photo: Movie poster grabbed from Herlyn Alegre's Facebook page.

The Asian Center offers M.A. degrees in Asian and in Philippine Studies. The Center also has an M.A. program in Philippine Studies that allows students to major in Philippine society and culture, Philippine foreign relations, or Philippine development studies. The Center also offers a Ph.D. program in Philippine Studies in conjunction with the College of Arts and Letters and the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy.