Zambales LGUs told to plan for quakes

The Zambales Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (PDRRMO) has asked local government units (LGUs) to identify possible evacuation areas across the province following a series of earthquakes that jolted various places in the country, including Zambales.

PDRRMO head Rolex Estella said this is part of the instruction by Governor Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. for LGUs to review disaster contingency plans and formulate courses of action to mitigate the effects of disasters.

‘We’re looking for open spaces in all municipalities that could be used as tent cities should a strong earthquake happen,’ Estella told the BusinessMirror on Wednesday night, just hours before two tremors hit Zambales early Thursday morning.

Estella explained that earthquake scenarios presume that existing evacuation centers, which usually are public schools and barangay facilities, won’t be viable during severe tremors, as they may be prone to collapse.

Moreover, as earthquake location is unpredictable, ‘evacuation plans really become a challenge, so there is really a need to pinpoint safe spaces beforehand,’ he said.

Zambales was rocked by two earthquakes that occurred within five minutes of each other early Thursday.

A magnitude 3.2 earthquake was recorded at 2:04 a.m. four kilometers west of Masinloc, followed by a magnitude 5.0 at 2:09 a.m. 8 kilometers west of the same town. Both occurred at a depth of 24 kilometers.

Last Saturday, October 11, another magnitude 5.0 earthquake also shook Zambales. So far, no damages nor casualties have been reported after the earthquakes.

Studies show that at least two active fault lines run across parts of the province: the East Zambales Fault, which extends offshore in the Lingayen Gulf in Pangasinan north of the province, and the Iba Fault, which is located inland in central part of Zambales. Both are said to be part of a larger system of tectonic structures in the region, including the Bataan Volcanic Arc Complex (BVAC).

The Manila Trench, which is located west of Zambales, is also associated with frequent earthquakes and is said to have shown some activity with magnitude 5.0 and above tremors in 2024 and 2025.

Estella said Gov. Ebdane has encouraged LGUs to adopt a three-tiered approach to prepare for a possible ‘Big One,’ a projected magnitude 7.2 earthquake that could affect Metro Manila and nearby provinces due possible fractures along the West Valley Fault that extends from Bulacan to Laguna.

This involves identifying risks and developing plans of action, executing response and mitigating measures during disaster, and assessing the plan’s overall effectiveness afterwards.

The LGUs are expected to update their contingency plans and submit the same to the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, which Ebdane chairs, Estella added.

In ‘Mr. Scorsese,’ fitting a filmmaking titan into the frame

The first time the filmmaker Rebecca Miller met Martin Scorsese was on the set of 2002’s Gangs of New York. Miller’s husband, Daniel Day-Lewis, was starring in it. There, Miller found an anxious Scorsese on the precipice of the film’s enormous fight scene, shot on a sprawling set.

‘He seemed like a young man, hoping that he had chosen the right way to shoot a massive scene,’ Miller recalls. ‘I was stunned by how youthful and alive he was.’ That remains much the same throughout Miller’s expansive and stirring documentary portrait of the endlessly energetic and singularly essential filmmaker. In Mr. Scorsese, which premieres on Friday on Apple TV, Miller captures the life and career of Scorsese, whose films have made one of the greatest sustained arguments for the power of cinema.

‘We talk about 32 films, which is a lot of films. But there are yet more films,’ Miller says, referencing Scorsese’s projects to come. ‘It’s a life that overspills its own bounds. You think you’ve got it, and then it’s more and more and more.’

Scorsese’s life has long had a mythic arc: The asthmatic kid from Little Italy who grew up watching old movies on television and went on to make some of the defining New York films. That’s a part of Mr. Scorsese, too, but Miller’s film, culled from 20 hours of interviews with Scorsese over five years, is a more intimate, reflective and often funny conversation about the compulsions that drove him and the abiding questions-of morality, faith and filmmaking-that have guided him.

‘Who are we? What are we, I should say?’ Scorsese says in the opening moments of the series. ‘Are we intrinsically good or evil?’

‘This is the struggle,’ he adds. ‘I struggle with it all the time.’

Miller began interviewing Scorsese during the pandemic. He was then beginning to make Killers of the Flower Moon. Their first meetings were outside. Miller first pitched the idea to Scorsese as a multifaceted portrait. Then, she imagined a two-hour documentary. Later, by necessity, it turned into a five-hour series. It still feels too short.

‘I explained I wanted to take a cubist approach, with different shafts of light on him from all different perspectives-collaborators, family,’ Miller says. ‘Within a very short amount of time, he sort of began talking as if we were doing it. I was a bit confused, thinking, ‘Is this a job interview or a planning situation?”

While the bulk of Mr. Scorsese are the director’s own film-to-film recollections, a wealth of other personalities color in the portrait. That includes collaborators, like editor Thelma Schoonmaker, Paul Schrader, Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio and Day-Lewis. It also includes Scorsese’s children, his ex-wives and his old Little Italy pals. One, Salvatore ‘Sally Gaga’ Uricola for the first time is revealed as the model for De Niro’s troublemaking, mailbox-blowing-up Johnny Boy in Mean Streets.

‘Cinema consumed him at such an early age and it never left him,’ DiCaprio says in the film. ‘There will never be anyone like him again,’ says Steven Spielberg.

It can be easy to think of Scorsese, perhaps the most revered living filmmaker, as an inevitability, that of course he gets to make the films he wants. But Mr. Scorsese is a reminder how often that wasn’t the case and how frequently Scorsese found himself on the outside of Hollywood, whether due to box-office disappointment, a clash of style or the perceived danger in controversial subjects (Taxi Driver, The Last Temptation of Christ) he was drawn to.

Film executives today, an especially risk-averse lot, could learn some lessons from Mr. Scorsese in what a difference they can make for a personal filmmaker. As discussed in the film, in the late 1970s, producer Irwin Winkler refused to do Rocky II with United Artists unless they also made ‘Raging Bull.’

Mr. Scorsese recently debuted at the New York Film Festival, where Miller’s son, Ronan Day-Lewis made his directorial debut with Anemone, a film that marked her husband’s return from retirement. At the Mr. Scorsese premiere, a packed audience at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall came to enthusiastically revel in, and pay tribute to its subject.

‘You hear all those people laughing with him or suddenly bursting into applause when they see Thelma Schoonmaker or at the end of the Last Waltz sequence,’ Miller says. ‘There was a sense of such palpable enthusiasm and love. My husband said something I thought was very beautiful: It reminded everyone of how much they love him.’

NBA using ‘automated officiating’ to get even more calls right

The play, in real time to the naked eye, might have looked very close to a violation. LeBron James leaped, got his right hand on the ball with a few tenths of the game’s final second remaining and tapped it through the basket to give the Los Angeles Lakers a buzzer-beating win last season.

Referees on the floor called it correctly. Video replay backed up their call, and the Lakers got a victory over the Indiana Pacers.

Turns out, it wasn’t close at all.

The NBA has a relatively new tool called ‘automated officiating,’ and the robotic eyes that are now tracking just about everything on basketball courts showed that James was nowhere near committing offensive basket interference on that play. It wasn’t needed to decide matters in that case – again, the humans got it right – but the NBA is tapping into technology more and more to ensure that plays like those get adjudicated correctly.

‘Turns out, computers are really good at this,’ said Evan Wasch, an NBA executive vice president overseeing basketball strategy and analytics. ‘So, if we can invest in this technology to get more calls right on the objective ones, we do two things.

‘One, the accuracy on those calls, by definition, goes up. But we also free up the human referees to not have to focus on those calls and in turn allow them to focus more closely on the really difficult judgment plays that they’re so adept at and actually increase accuracy there, too. We think there’s what we call double bottom-line benefit to doing this from an accuracy perspective.’

Basketball, of course, is not alone in veering toward higher-tech officiating.

Robot umpires are getting called up to Major League Baseball next season; humans will still make the calls, but teams can challenge ball or strike calls and an automated system will determine if those challenges were successful. Many major tennis tournaments, even Wimbledon, have replaced line judges with electronic line-calling. Soccer has technology to tell referees if a ball fully crossed a goal line or if someone was offsides, calls that in real time might just be guesswork.

It’s important to note that NBA referees are not being replaced. Technology is just helping; instead of six human eyes on a court, it’s now six human eyes and a whole lot of camera lenses that are there to collect as much data as the league can think of.

‘Let’s get it right,’ Milwaukee coach Doc Rivers said. ‘And let’s get right quicker.’

Those are the goals, the NBA insists. Using technology helps with game flow thanks to shorter review times, helps with the accuracy and also provides transparency in the ability to show fans and players computer-generated images to explain how calls were made.

Cameras in arenas are helping to precisely make calls such as the ones along sidelines and baselines – who was a ball off, was it out of bounds, that sort of thing – as well as determining if blocked shots were good or was goaltending committed on those plays.

‘What we’re doing is tracking a bunch of objects in space with incredible precision,’ Wasch said. ‘We are tracking a basketball, fingers, feet, heads, hands, all the parts of the body. We’re tracking them in space with cameras and sensors. And there’s an element of machine learning and artificial intelligence to build those algorithms on top of that to then know what in fact happened from a basketball perspective based on the movement of all those things.’

The technology isn’t limited to calls or non-calls.

Some referees have been wearing earpieces during this preseason as the league tinkers with ways for better communication methods. There’s been talk at the league of sending alerts to smartwatches about decisions on calls. And at summer league this year, there was even a sensor placed inside the ball to help collect data. The sensor weighs about the same as a raisin does. Hundreds of players used the ball, which typically weighs somewhere around 600 grams; nobody noticed that it was about a gram heavier than usual.

In the end, it’s all about making the product better.

‘There’s actually been a ton of openness from the referees and the referee union on implementing this technology,’ Wasch said. ‘It lets them focus on the things that they train for this job to do.’

Angel’s Pizza opens new store at UN Ave, Manila – Home of the Original Creamy Spinach Dip Pizza

Angel’s Pizza, one of the country’s fastest-growing pizza chains under Figaro Culinary Group (FCG), proudly celebrated the grand opening of its newest branch at Shell UN Avenue, Manila on October 14, 2025.

The event was graced by Hon. Mayor Isko Moreno and Vice Mayor Chi Atienza, together with FCG Chief Operating Officer Mike Barret, the FCG Executive Committee, and the Management Committee Team.

As part of the festivities, the VIP guests led the ribbon cutting and ceremonial pizza slicing, symbolizing a new chapter for Angel’s Pizza as it continues to expand across the nation.

This milestone marks the 158th store of Angel’s Pizza nationwide, reinforcing the brand’s commitment to bringing quality, value-for-money pizzas closer to every Filipino community.

Known as the home of the original Creamy Spinach Dip Pizza, Angel’s Pizza continues to win the hearts of pizza lovers with its signature Double Deal offers, freshly made dough, and generous toppings – all baked to perfection.

‘Every new store opening brings us closer to our goal of making Angel’s Pizza a household name across the country,’ said Mike Barret, COO of Figaro Coffee Group. ‘We’re grateful to our loyal customers for their continued trust and to our partners who make our expansion possible.’

Guests and customers were treated to an exciting grand opening celebration, which included the store blessing, ribbon cutting, ceremonial pizza slicing, and exclusive promos to welcome the newest branch to the growing Angel’s Pizza family.

The new Angel’s Pizza Shell UN Avenue, Manila branch aims to serve both dine-in and on-the-go customers, offering a convenient stop for pizza lovers in the bustling Manila area.

Angel’s Pizza is set to open 14 more stores before the year ends, continuing its mission to make its well-loved pizzas accessible to more Filipinos nationwide.

RCBC advances employee experience through cutting-edge HR tech integration

The Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) has extended its long-standing partnership with Adrenalin, a leading enterprise human capital management (HCM) solutions provider, to strengthen its human resource (HR) capabilities and drive next-generation workforce transformation.

The Yuchengco-led bank will adopt Adrenalin 2.0, designed to create a more seamless, data-driven, and connected HR experience that supports both the bank’s workforce and business transformation goals. It will support more than 7,900 employees across 450 branches nationwide.

Adrenalin Max 2.0 is the next-generation HCM platform designed to help enterprises create connected, intelligent, and personalized talent experiences. It unifies all core HR functions – including talent acquisition, development, operations, remuneration, and engagement – within a single, configurable system that delivers faster implementation, enterprise-grade governance, and actionable insights powered by artificial intelligence (AI).

The HCM platform is trusted by more than 2,000 enterprises worldwide and offers payroll compliance across 40 countries. The company has a strong global presence across Asia Pacific, the Middle East, Africa, and the United States. It powers RCBC’s web-based HCM system, myHRIS, recognized as one of the most flexible and configurable HR systems in the market.

‘For more than a decade, we’ve built a resilient HR backbone. Onboarding Adrenalin Max 2.0 elevates that foundation with enhanced capabilities that personalizes every employee journey from candidate to alumni,’ First Senior Vice President and Head of RCBC Human Resources Group Rowena S. Subido said.

‘By unifying data and automating routine work, our HR teams can focus on more strategic people initiatives, workforce readiness, and improved employee experience. Most importantly, empowered employees drive better customer experiences-fuelling RCBC’s next phase of growth,’ she further said.

Srinivasa Bharathy, Managing Director and CEO of Adrenalin, said the company aims to set a new benchmark for talent experience with RCBC that ‘powers service excellence and drives sustainable growth.’

‘The Philippines is a strategic market for us and we’re deepening local investments in product, partners, and talent to deliver future-ready employee experiences,’ he further said.

Oi! Music makes a stunning resurgence with upcoming rock against racism concert

It has been an incredible last 10 months for Oi! Music. December 15 of last year saw the launch of the first Oi! Music album on vinyl in the Philippines with Kalbo Pilipinas. The Sound of Pinoi! Skinhead Anthems (Vanity Records) celebrated the scene and cemented its legacy. The album, which has since sold out and was also featured at an incredible launch show at WYP in Poblacion, Makati.

This 2025 has seen the releases of Cebuanos Fury (Vanity Records) and, most recently MaOi (Mutilated Noise Records) that has kept the momentum. And this coming Saturday, October 18, the biggest show in the Oi! Music scene will return with Oi! Attack: Rock Against Racism at Rewind also in Poblacion, Makati.

‘The Oi! Attack we organized in 2023 was supposed to be the last one after doing this for a while,’ said Merck Alvarez, the organizer of these events. ‘But the scene is alive and doing well again, so game lang ulit.’

‘Oi! Attack is not for profit but for the scene where skinheads and punks can enjoy good music by bands who are against racism in any form and are against fascist governments. And the foreign bands support this too. This is expressed in their music and in their lyrics as well.’

Performing at Oi! Attack Rock Against Racism are local bands namely the Spaceflower Show, Disorganize, Against the Wall, Squad 79, Southern Lads, as well as Permanent Revolution from Australia, Dickie Spike from Japan, and the headliner making a return to these shores. the Bois from Singapore.

Oi! Music is a subgenre and subculture of punk rock that fused early punk rock, ska, 1970s British rock and roll, football chants, and pub rock, and has come to be considered mainly a skinhead-oriented genre. Oi! Music has gone from merely a scene in the United Kingdom to a global phenomenon today.

Added Alvarez, ‘We will have merchandise available for fans, but of course, limited yan. The show begins at exactly 3pm on October 18.’

Mavs give Kidd another multiyear contract extension

The Dallas Mavericks have again extended the contract of coach Jason Kidd, who led them to the NBA Finals as a coach two seasons ago and a championship as their point guard in 2011.

The Mavericks announced Tuesday night that they agreed to a multiyear extension, but didn’t reveal the length or any other details of the deal for Kidd, who is going into his fifth season as their coach. His first multiyear extension came in the middle of the 2024 playoffs when they made the NBA Finals before losing to Boston.

‘J-Kidd’s basketball resume is one of the best in the game, and through every situation he has proven he’s the right person to lead the Mavericks,’ general manager Nico Harrison said. ‘He has a track record of developing some of the best talent in the league, as well as the ability to connect with players to bring out the best version of themselves.’

Kidd has a 362-339 record in nine seasons as an NBA head coach with Dallas, Brooklyn and Milwaukee. He is 179-149 for the Mavericks with two deep playoff runs.

Dallas earlier this year denied the New York Knicks permission to speak with Kidd about their coaching vacancy. The 52-year-old Kidd played the last of his 19 NBA seasons for the Knicks in 2012-13.

He went into coaching immediately upon retirement, leading Brooklyn to the second round of the playoffs in his first season in 2013-14 before Milwaukee hired him away from the Nets.

The Bucks fired Kidd in the middle of his fourth season – with a pair of first-round playoff exits the first three years – and he spent two years as an assistant with the Lakers, including when LA won the NBA title in the 2020 playoff bubble. He replaced Rick Carlisle in Dallas.

After Kidd and NBA Finals MVP Dirk Nowitzki led the Mavs to the 2011 title, they didn’t win another playoff series until beating Utah in the first round under Kidd in 2022.

Raul Isidro headlines one-man show and book launch at ManilArt 2025 under Life ‘n Arts Gallery

Life ‘n Arts Gallery proudly presents a special one-man show and book launch featuring the works of renowned Filipino artist Raul Isidro at ManilArt 2025, running from October 15 to 19, 2025, at the SMX Convention Center Aura, Taguig City.

The highlight of the exhibition is the launch of the art book Soulscape of a Gilded Passion, written by Sherwin Paul Gonzales and produced by Lerma Julian of Life ‘n Arts Gallery. According to Julian, the project aims to honor and document the remarkable artistic journey of Raul Isidro, a living master whose lifelong dedication and evolving vision have shaped Philippine abstraction for more than five decades.

Born in Calbayog City, Samar, in 1943, Raul G. Isidro stands among the most respected names in modern Philippine art. A graduate of the University of Santo Tomas College of Fine Arts, he pursued further studies in painting at the Philippine Women’s University and later took an advanced art course at Sonoma Community College in California.

Before devoting himself entirely to painting, Isidro worked in advertising and sales, balancing work and study as he developed his artistic voice. His story of discipline and quiet persistence continues to inspire generations of artists. He eventually became a full-time artist and teacher, serving as dean of Fine Arts at PWU and later president of both the Art Association of the Philippines and the Philippine Association of Printmakers.

Through decades of exploration, Isidro has developed a distinct visual language that reflects both his mastery of abstraction and his deep connection to nature. His paintings often capture the movement of light, water, and land in forms that blend emotion with structure. Each work reveals his contemplative approach to artmaking, where color and texture are harmonized to express peace, passion, and the timeless beauty of the natural world.

The newly launched book, Soulscape of a Gilded Passion, delves deeply into the life and creative evolution of Raul Isidro. Written by Sherwin Paul Gonzales, it presents not only a collection of his artworks but also a narrative of his artistic growth, philosophies, and influence in the Philippine art scene. Through essays, photographs, and reflections, the book offers an intimate look at the artist’s journey – from his early years of experimentation to his established position as one of the country’s foremost abstractionists. It is both a tribute and an archive, celebrating a life devoted to art, innovation, and purpose.

This year’s ManilArt 2025, themed ‘Across Forms, Beyond Borders,’ provides the perfect stage for Isidro’s new milestone. The annual national art fair, co-presented by the ManilART Foundation and the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), is part of the official Museums and Galleries Month celebration and remains the country’s premier platform for showcasing Filipino artistry to a global audience. With its theme ‘Across Forms, Beyond Borders,’ ManilArt 2025 underscores the dynamic intersections of art, culture, and community, a vision that mirrors Isidro’s own philosophy of transcending limits through creativity.

This is a celebration of passion, legacy, and the Filipino artistic spirit. Through this cohllaboration, Life ‘n Arts Gallery continues its commitment to honoring the masters and fostering a deeper appreciation of the arts, reminding audiences that the journey of an artist, like that of Raul Isidro, is itself a work of art, constantly unfolding and ever inspired.

ICC removes Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan from Duterte Case over conflict of interest

THE International Criminal Court (ICC) has officially removed Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan from the case against former Philippine President Rodrigo Roa Duterte, citing a potential conflict of interest due to Khan’s prior involvement before taking office.

In a decision dated October 2 and released in redacted form on October 15, the ICC Appeals Chamber granted the defense’s request to disqualify Khan from The Prosecutor v. Rodrigo Roa Duterte. The Chamber cited Article 42(7) of the Rome Statute, which bars prosecutors from participating in cases where their impartiality might reasonably be questioned.

Before becoming ICC Prosecutor, Khan had submitted an Article 15 communication to then-Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda, urging an investigation into alleged crimes against humanity committed during Duterte’s controversial anti-drug campaign.

Under Article 15 of the Rome Statute, the ICC Prosecutor can initiate investigations based on information submitted by individuals, NGOs, or other entities. These communications are not formal complaints but evidence packages that help the Prosecutor decide whether to open a preliminary examination.

Although the Chamber found no proof of actual bias, it ruled that Khan’s ‘significantly intense and multifaceted’ involvement in the Article 15 submission could lead a reasonable observer to believe he had already formed an opinion on Duterte’s criminal responsibility.

As the ruling states: ‘The Appeals Chamber considers that a reasonable observer would conclude that, in light of the nature and the extent of the Prosecutor’s involvement in the Article 15 Communication, he could be expected to have formed an opinion on the individual criminal responsibility of Mr. Duterte, that could adversely affect the required impartiality in his current role.’

ICC Statement: Case Moves Forward

Caroline Maurel, ICC outreach officer from the Public Information and Outreach Section, clarified: ‘This disqualification has no impact on the ongoing case against Mr Duterte.’

She explained that while the Appeals Chamber did not find actual bias, it recognized that Khan’s prior role could reasonably be seen as compromising his impartiality.

The case will now be handled by Deputy Prosecutor Mame Mandiaye Niang, who leads the ICC’s work on the Philippines situation.

Duterte was turned over to ICC custody in March 2025 and faces charges of crimes against humanity linked to thousands of extrajudicial killings during his presidency.

Lav Diaz, ‘Magellan’ and the collision of cinema and conscience

The world of Lav Diaz is one where cinema and conscience often collide. His latest film, Magellan, continues that tradition, and this time the collision cuts deeper than ever.

Days after the New York Film Festival premiere, Diaz reflected over coffee: ‘I might not just face accusations of historical revisionism, but even excommunication from the Catholic Church.’ His remark followed a wave of online threats and criticism, proof of how provocative his retelling of early colonial history has become.

The film revisits one of the most contested encounters in world history: the first meeting between the Philippines and the West through the voyage of Ferdinand Magellan.

The backlash stemmed from Diaz’s daring interpretation that Lapu-Lapu, long celebrated as the first Filipino hero who killed Magellan, may be more myth than man, a symbol shaped by centuries of oral tradition and nationalist imagination. He goes further, suggesting that Rajah Humabon, often vilified for aligning with the Spaniards, may in fact be the first true national hero, a leader navigating the collision of cultures with political foresight and spiritual complexity.

For many Filipinos, those assertions felt like an assault on a sacred story of resistance. For Diaz, they were an invitation to examine how history, faith and identity were shaped by power and perception.

The premiere drew a sold-out crowd at the Walter Reade Theater. Before the screening, Janus Films hosted a reception at Café Paradiso across the street, where Diaz and Gael García Bernal mingled with guests, critics, and festival programmers. The mood was warm and expectant, shaped by curiosity about how Diaz would reinterpret the mythos of Magellan and Lapu-Lapu.

Dennis Lim, artistic director of the New York Film Festival, moderated the post-screening discussion and introduced Diaz as ‘one of the most important living filmmakers working in the language of time, memory and national history.’

Lim’s connection with Diaz spans more than a decade; as director of programming at film at Lincoln Center, he curated ‘Time Regained: The Films of Lav Diaz,’ the most comprehensive American retrospective of the director’s work. That early advocacy helped establish Diaz’s presence in the US arthouse circuit, paving the way for his return to Lincoln Center with Magellan.

Diaz said the story of Magellan has long lived in the Filipino consciousness. It marked the first recorded contact between the islands and the West, a beginning he wanted to reexamine for its loss, distortion and moral weight. ‘Ang kuwento ni Magellan ay koneksyon sa ating kasaysayan,’ he said. ‘Doon nagsimula ang kamalayan ng mga Pilipino.’

He spent seven years researching before production began, working in Seville and poring over archival materials. From Pigafetta’s chronicle to lesser-known European accounts, he compared contradictions and omissions. Diaz noted that several of Pigafetta’s descriptions do not make sense, such as the supposed thousands of native warriors who surrounded Magellan during the ‘Battle of Mactan.’ ‘You read it carefully, and it becomes clear that many of these numbers and scenes were exaggerated,’ Diaz said. ‘They were written from the viewpoint of survival and guilt, not truth.’

The result, he said, became a dialectical investigation: a personal act of returning to the source and confronting what history concealed.

Shot entirely on a Panasonic Lumix GH7, Magellan extends Diaz’s long-take realism into digital precision. Using only two lenses-a 12 mm and a 35 mm Panasonic-he and his small crew filmed across rugged terrain and unpredictable weather, capturing long sequences that mirrored the endurance of Magellan’s voyage.

For Gael García Bernal, playing Magellan was both demanding and revelatory. As a Mexican actor, he approached the role as an exploration of shared colonial legacies. ‘The concept of Magellan was fascinating from the start, especially coming from Lav,’ Bernal said. ‘It was an amazing and incredible challenge.’

Bernal first heard of the project from Portuguese producer and filmmaker Joaquim Sapinho. He and Gael initially spoke on the phone, later met in Berlin, and eventually Diaz, Gael and Joaquim came together in Lisbon.

Drawn by Diaz’s vision, he immersed himself in historical texts and languages to portray a man torn between faith, ambition and empire. He was particularly intrigued by Enrique, who is a Malay, Magellan’s enslaved interpreter, possibly the first person to complete a circumnavigation of the globe, whose story symbolizes the beginnings of global hybridity.

Making Magellan, Diaz said, was punishing. He wrote scenes daily during filming, guided by instinct and scholarship. ‘Pinuhunan ko ang buhay ko, muntik na akong mamatay sa pelikulang ito,’ he said. ‘Kahit sinong nagmamarunong na historiyano sa Pilipinas, handa akong harapin sila.’

Behind the camera, the production mirrored its own theme of struggle: betrayals, abandonment, personality clashes, and even blackmail attempts. Diaz said these tensions reflected the same human frailties that unraveled Magellan’s expedition centuries ago.

During the post-screening dialogue, the conversation shifted to the authorship of history. Diaz observed that Western accounts still dominate, leaving Filipino voices peripheral. His film, he said, attempts to restore those missing perspectives, the small human truths obscured by conquest.

Bernal added that the Pacific crossing remains ‘more uncertain than going to the moon,’ calling it one of humanity’s greatest leaps of faith. ‘Those men believed their survival meant divine purpose,’ he said.

When asked how he sustained himself through years of research and production, Diaz smiled. ‘Meditation, music and marijuana,’ he replied, drawing laughter from the audience. He added that art, like truth, requires clarity and compassion, a state reached only by slowing down and seeing the world without illusion.

For a filmmaker who has built his career on confronting myth, memory and power, it was a fitting epilogue, another chapter in a body of work that insists on reclaiming the Filipino story, frame by frame.

To Diaz, elevating Humabon is not an act of defiance but of reexamination. He describes Humabon as a ruler caught between loyalty to his people and the overwhelming force of a foreign faith. His conversion to Christianity, often dismissed as betrayal, was, in Diaz’s view, a pragmatic attempt at survival-an early form of diplomacy in the face of conquest.

‘Humabon understood the language of power,’ Diaz said. ‘He chose negotiation over annihilation.’

In that choice, Diaz finds not weakness, but courage: the beginning of a Filipino consciousness aware of both submission and resistance, faith and reason, tragedy and nationhood.