Home #Hwoodtimes ASOG: A Brilliant Filipino Comedy and Wild Road Trip to a Gay...

ASOG: A Brilliant Filipino Comedy and Wild Road Trip to a Gay Beauty Pageant

By Robert St. Martin

Jaya quite smitten with Cyrus the ice cream seller

Los Angeles, CA (The Hollywood Times) 7/22/23 – One of the best surprises this year at Outfest Los Angeles is clearly Seán Devlin’s Asog (Canada, 2023) – the story of Jaya, a 40-year-old non-binary schoolteacher whose brief career as a comedian hosting a late-night television show abruptly ends due to a huge and highly destructive typhoon in the Philippines. Picking up the pieces in their life, Jaya decides to travel across the country in hopes of winning a beauty pageant and the prize money that comes with it. Flipping the conventions of the road movie on its head, Asog is a one-of-a-kind film that plays with the line between narrative and documentary to become something entirely new.

Destroyed homes & businesses on Leyte from typhoon

Filipino culture is far more complex than the standard portrayal shown in many films in the Philippines as wallowing in poverty and crime – often the favored genres of Filipino filmmakers. Here in Asog, the horror is Mother Nature and the visceral damage of the worst typhoon to hit the islands in a century. But throughout this film, the natural beauty of this nation of a thousand islands shines through as well as the love and resilience of its people. Filipino-Chinese Canadian director Seán Devlin is first and foremost a comedian with a much experience in his stand-up roles as well his comedic sense in writing. His recent work includes Borat: Subsequent Movie film (2020), starring Sacha Baron Cohen. In Asog, Devlin’s comic sense shapes this highly entertaining but pointed film.

Real destruction from Typhoon Yolanda in 2013

It is most appropriate that the main character in the tale is Jaya, also a comedian in the Filipino tradition of performers who combine jokes, storytelling, dance, and song popular in gay venues and also regular nightclubs. Jaya is a teacher in a middle school teaching science after the sudden end of a brief success with the late-night television talk show – due to the destruction of the television studio in the city of Tacloban City by Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) in 2013. At the start of the film, we see Jaya busy correcting the homework of students and getting frustrated with the school headmaster.

Jaya & Cyrus in love

The story takes place in a rural part of the island Leyte in the Visayas where there is only a dirt road, and the people live in simple huts built of bamboo and roofed with palm fronds. Being a ball of joyous energy, Jaya flirts with the local ice cream seller Cyrus who is gay, and they soon end up living together in Jaya’s small house. But Jaya’s intrinsic sense of humor infuses all these scenes with something more than quotidian existence. There is joy in life here that reveals the love and humanity of the Filipino people in these islands.

Jaya runs into former student Anel

In the Philippines, nothing is as certain as the arrival of a typhoon. It’s not a matter of if but when. After all, at least 20 typhoons visit the country every year. With a death toll of around 6,300 people and damage worth 95.5 billion Filipino pesos, Typhoon Yolanda has claimed the first spot on this list of the top 10 strongest typhoons in the Philippines. No one can ever forget this 2013 disaster. The aerial images of towns leveled to the ground are forever burned into Filipinos’ minds. Storm surges devastated many places such as Tacloban City. Waves measuring up to 19 feet destroyed buildings, knocked over trees, and carried cars away. A lot of people were caught off guard, resulting in injuries and fatalities. Rescue operations were delayed since towns and villages were completely cut off. Affected areas went without power for weeks.

Jaya & Arnel at the seaside ready to cross to the beauty pageant

With Typhoon Yolanda and its massive destruction as the backdrop, Jaya’s story becomes a road trip from the large island of Leyte and heavily damaged Tacloban City to the small island of Sicogon, where there is going to be a beauty pageant for Miss Gay Sicogon. Picking up the pieces in their life, Jaya decides to travel across the island of Leyte and cross the inland sea to Sicogon in hopes of winning a beauty pageant for the prize money that comes with it. But before Jaya can leave, a chance encounter with Arnel, a student going the same way in search of his father, complicates their solitary plans. As they travel seemingly countless miles together on foot, bike, and boat, the unlikely duo find themselves forever changed by each other and those they encounter on their journey. Along the way, the two encounter many people who share their own real-life experiences with their typhoon, its aftermath, the loss of loved ones, and the destruction of so many homes and businesses.

Arnel contemplating a trip to find his lost father

Storytelling is an important part of traditional Filipino culture, especially at the time of memorial services for a deceased loved one. Seán Devlin has built into this film as parallel, partially animated allegorical tale of a frog whose incessant riveting at night disturbs the sleep of the local island animal king. This bit of Filipino mythology serves as a counterbalance to the real-life and necessary commentary on colonialism, transphobia, and climate change that is impacting the severity of global weather patterns.

Cyrus is a bit crazy about Jaya from the start

Filipino cinema has produced several acclaimed filmmakers who have gained recognition both locally and internationally. Directors like Lino Brocka, Brillante Mendoza, Lav Diaz, and Erik Matti have won awards at prestigious film festivals like Cannes and Venice, making Filipino cinema an important part of the global film landscape. What I found so interesting about Asog was its combination of comedy, satire and brutal realism about both Filipino experiences and the imprint of foreign colonial cultures on the Filipino life. In some ways, Asog harkens back to a kind of indie filmmaking that began in the Philippines with Kidlat Tahimik’s Perfumed Nightmare (1977), an award-winning film at Berlin from almost 40 years ago that catches the absurdity of the human condition through the eyes of a resourceful and cheerful young Filipino man.

The film has three screenings at the recent Tribeca Film Festival, after its completion under the steady hand of director Seán Devlin and producer Amanda Ernst with Beb Bingo Entertainment of Canada. An earlier version was part of Cannes Film Festival’s Docs-in-Progress this year. At some point, the film attracted the attention of actor Alan Cummings who signed on as an Executive Producer. This is the story of Jaya, as told by director Seán Devlin and Arnel, who are the main writers of Asog. I had the privilege of interviewing Seán Devlin and Jaya at Outfest Los Angeles before the screening and I find them so talented and funny. At the Q&A after the film screening on Sunday, Jaya – in character ­– said that after the successful screening at Tribeca, “I was feeling so sad . . . because I failed . . .  to get an American husband.” Together they have crafted one of the finest Filipino films of recent years – most deserving of a larger viewership.