Transit (2013 film)

Transit

Transit (2013)
Directed by Hannah Espia
Produced by Paul Soriano
Screenplay by Giancarlo Abrahan
Hannah Espia
Starring Irma Adlawan
Marc Alvarez
Mercedes Cabral
Jasmine Curtis
Ping Medina
Production
company
Cinemalaya
TEN17P
Release dates
  • July 27, 2013 (2013-07-27) (Cinemalaya)
  • September 11, 2013 (2013-09-11) (Philippines)
Running time
93 minutes
Country Philippines
Language Filipino
Tagalog
English
Hebrew

Transit is a 2013 Filipino independent drama film written and directed by Hannah Espia. The film follows a story about a single father who is forced to hide his children from immigration police in Israel after the Israeli government decides to deport children of immigrant workers.[1] It is Espia's full-length debut film. It was mostly shot in Israel. The film competed under the New Breed section of Cinemalaya 2013. The film won Best Film, directing, acting and other technical awards.

Espia said that the inspiration to do the film came after talking to an OFW who was bringing home his child from Israel. In 2009, the Israeli government enacted a law that deports the children of migrant workers unless they fulfill a certain criterion. Both Israeli and migrant workers rallied against the law that separates parents from their children.

The film will also compete in the 18th Busan International Film Festival under the New Currents section.[2] The film was selected as the Philippine entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards,[3] but it was not nominated.

Plot

The film begins and ends in an airport during a father and son’s transit flight from Tel Aviv to Manila. It tells the story of Moises (Ping Medina), a Filipino single-dad working as a caregiver in Herzliya, Israel, who comes home to his apartment in Tel Aviv to celebrate his son Joshua (Marc Justine Alvarez)’s 4th birthday. It was on that day that Moises, together with their Filipino neighbors Janet (Irma Adlawan), and her daughter Yael (Jasmine Curtis), find out that the Israeli government is going to deport children of foreign workers. Afraid of the new law, Moises and Janet decide to hide their children from the immigration police by making them stay inside the house.[4]

Cast

Awards

References

  1. "Cinemalaya: New breed of Filipino bang bang <3talent". Retrieved 2013-06-06.
  2. "'Transit' to compete in Busan". Retrieved 2013-09-09.
  3. "Transit is PHL's entry for 86th Oscars". Phil Star. Retrieved 2013-09-18.
  4. "Transit". Retrieved 2013-08-03.

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