Dukot (2016) Poster

(2016)

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6/10
Nice Thriller
boblipton23 July 2016
A corrupt government official's son is kidnapped. He struggles escape while his parents and sister try to ransom him.

This is the first movie from the Philippines I have ever seen, so all the usual national cinema markers which I might use to judge it are mysteries to me. What I am left with are a well-told story with competent and undistinguished actors. All aspects of film-making are well tended to, with competent but unspectacular camera work -- if anything it reminds me of Sidney Lumet's on-the-street guerilla works like DOG DAY AFTERNOON.

One thing I did notice about the production was the shortage of bright colors and the over lit images. Combined with a slightly under saturated print, this yielded a dreamlike, mildly nightmarish quality to the movie.

If you wish to make an acquaintance with Phillipines movies, this would make a good entry point to their cinema. I found it a worthwhile film.
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6/10
Squandered opportunity to dissect moral ambiguities
kevin_newdirections23 July 2016
In a society where crime has inevitably become a way of life, director Paul Soriano (Kid Kulafu; Thelma) presents his latest film, Dukot, as a peephole into the traumas of abduction. The film delves into the psyches of both victims and perpetrators to show that evil persists in all social classes. Though Dukot can do more with dissecting its moral ambiguities, it makes it so at the expense of advocacy squandered.

Based on true events, Dukot centers on the kidnapping of Carlo (Enrique Gil), the son of a corrupt customs official, Charlie Sandoval (Ricky Davao). With both families of the captors and the captive in the throes of compromising their moralities, will the unforeseen tragedy cost Carlo's life?

The film's story, although typical, is a welcome addition to the local crime-thriller genre – with its excellent direction and cinematography. The aerial shots, obscure perspectives, and pulsating score effectively fill the air with dread and tension– Dukot is doubtless a technically well-crafted film.

Dukot is anchored by earnest portrayals from its cast. Enrique Gil wears a face glum with mental and emotional anguish. (At one point, he gets beaten up, and we guys get to relish that moment when we all look better than him. Ha!). Being silent for most of the film, his role demands more skill and nuance, which the young thesp ably delivers. Ricky Davao's two-faced character of both a model father and a corrupt government official may not be fully utilized by the plot, but he plays a huge part when it comes to reflecting the viewers' fright. Playing the role of Carlo's sister Cathy, Shaina Magdayao showcases the most range of emotions of guilt, fear and courage. Ping and Alex Medina's menacing delinquents ground the film on reality yet they keep from the pratfalls of becoming one-sided villains. Christopher De Leon strays away from his brash stereotype, and this time embodies a subdued sinister to his character.

This film heavily invests on the parallelism between the two contrasting households: the captors' and Carlos'. In one scene, Carlo witnesses a birthday party of one of his captor's family member, which makes him long the familial love he has been receiving but has taken for granted. The film also establishes a similarity in the characters played by Ricky Davao, Christopher De Leon and Ping Medina, despite their varying moral codes–that even a corrupt government official or a ruthless hostage can be steadfast fathers who will go beyond unimaginable lengths for their family's welfare. While Dukot raises interesting questions about what makes a good father and whether a good motive justifies a heinous act, it fails to offer any solid answer.

The subject of corruption is also put forward, even showing flashbacks of under-the-table transactions which are explicitly directed towards the "untouchable padrinos" in government. At that point, the film seems to concoct a connection between the abduction and the prevalent corruption, but this idea is completely dropped by the third act. Although a direct connection is not necessary for the film to make sense, the disappointing resolution falls short of delivering the social allegory it is trying to build. Moreover, some scenes proved irrelevant rather than beneficial. In one scene, Carlo sneaks in an official receipt which indicates his current location. In another, he tries to lure a deaf girl with paper planes to aid his escape. But none of those ruses really pay off. The movie opens with a grainy footage of an ATM attack, but it is never mentioned again. In the end, all of these half-baked elements, which were intended to add juice to the story, ends up feeling like afterthoughts that were squeezed in to elevate a thinly scoped plot.

Dukot can be commended on injecting fresh ideas into the local mainstream industry, and it shows Soriano's maturity in his craft. However, the script lacks the guts to deliver a story as dark and gritty as its visuals. Dukot holds back on depicting hostility and violence that could have rendered audiences more upset and unsettled about today's reality the moment they exit theaters.

http://www.filmpolicereviews.com/reviews/dukot
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2/10
Bland kidnapping saga you have seen before
niehow13 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Spoiler alert. I wanted to like this film. Technically it was OK. Acting was sub-par save for one character, "Shotgun Joe", who filled the screen with his presence. All the others were either lazy or inept. What angered me about this film was that it had many scenes foreshadowing an inside job between the kidnapped son and his kidnappers. I was waiting for the twist to unravel....but it never did! There was no inside job. Only a "ive seen this before a hundred times" payout. And the typical "Hollywood type happy ending" was even more frustrating. It even had the cops hitting bad guys with every shot but when the bad guy is point blank range he misses! AGHHHHHHH!
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