On 21 September 1972, the Philippines were plunged into a dark night lasting sixteen years. On that day, President Marcos announced a state of emergency. Censorship, intimidation and distrust tarnished the days in the oldest democracy in Asia, until the dictator fled the country after the controversial elections of 1986.
‘Leave it for tomorrow, for night has fallen’ is the answer Jet Leyco was given as a child when he asked about the old days. He never knew his grandparents, on either side, and the only story he knew about his mother was of her simple wedding. In Leave It for Tomorrow, for Night Has Fallen he reconstructs the past; a past of which he has only hazy childhood memories.
Using four interwoven stories, he sketches an era that gradually dissolves into no longer wanting to know and deliberate silence. Leyco’s experimental style, which at times leaves the viewer grasping for something to hold onto, increases the sense of indefinable threat.
- Director
- Jet Leyco
- Premiere
- International premiere
- Country of production
- Philippines
- Year
- 2013
- Festival Edition
- IFFR 2014
- Length
- 100'
- Medium
- DCP
- Original title
- Bukas na lang, sapagkat gabi na
- Language
- Filipino
- Producers
- Veronica Santiago, Ronald Arguelles, Jet Leyco, Neil Derrick Bion
- Production Companies
- Kerberus Kinorama Klassiks, CinemaOne Originals, Barong Tagalog Films, Punch Kick!
- Sales
- ABS-CBN Creative Programs Inc.
- Screenplay
- Jet Leyco, Norman Wilwayco
- Cinematography
- Tristan Jed Salas
- Editor
- Jet Leyco
- Production Design
- Harley Alcasid
- Sound Design
- Jet Leyco
- Music
- Wu Quan, Earthmover
- Cast
- Raul Morit, Lemuel Silvestre