Berlinale 2017 Q&A: "Motherland" (Part 3 of 3)

Опубликовано: 08 Июнь 2026
на канале: Movie inSITE: Dialogues
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Berlin International Film Festival 2017: “Motherland” (U.S./Philippines)

Director Ramona S. Diaz, director of Photography Nadia Hallgren, and editor Leah Marino addressed the audience in a Q&A after the screening of their documentary on Feb. 12, 2017.

Film summary from the Berlin International Film Festival website:

One of Manila’s public hospitals houses the largest maternity ward in the world. It’s a lifeline for expectant mothers just managing to scrape by on the fringes of society, with as many as 100 babies being born here every day. Motherland follows three protagonists over the course of their stay amidst hundreds of other women.
Following the cinéma vérité tradition, director Ramona S. Diaz eschews interviews of any kind, observing instead what goes on in this place: overfilled hallways and shared beds to deal with the flood of births, information conveyed through loudspeakers, visiting times as a huge logistical challenge. A baby is lost and then reappears, deliveries are captured almost incidentally and in between social workers tout the advantages of family planning. Motherland is more than a portrait of an institution though, delivering equally multi-layered insights into Philippine society, which is marked by a deep-rooted Catholicism, the powerlessness of the poor and an explosion in the birth rate. And yet all these issues are swathed in humour and human warmth. Mothers give birth to life, and life gives birth to stories. One has seldom been so close to both at once.