OFF WOLRD
Delving deeper into the subject matter of Director Mateo GuezÂ’ 2009 Contact Toronto Photography exhibit of the same name, Off World is an ethereal, occasionally disturbing portrait of one of The PhilippinesÂ’ most notorious slums.
Though fictional, Off World plays like a documentary, following a young Toronto man named Lucky, whose life is utterly transformed during a journey to his birthplace of Smokey Mountain. Once known as the Kingdom of Tondo, Smokey Mountain is now one of the most densely populated urban landscapes in the Philippines; a vast slum surrounding a mountain of garbage 12 storeyÂ’s high, named for the methane gases that leak continuously from refuse accumulated over the course of more than half a century.
Here, where entire families eke out a meager living as scavengers, Lucky grapples with the echoes of his past in an attempt to define himself and reconcile his comparatively affluent Canadian upbringing with the hard-bitten existence of the children of Smokey Mountain. Guided by Julia, a worker at a local NGO, Lucky discovers a living brother who has managed to escape the life of a scavenger, but still lives in the slums surrounding the dump. Without revealing their relationship, and in an effort to fill the gap between them, Lucky immerses himself in the culture of Smokey Mountain and his brotherÂ’s life, uncovering still more tangible links to his past.
Finally revealing himself to the family he had no idea still existed, Lucky finds more than just the answers to his questions about his origins. He uncovers a spirit of hope and a rare beauty that grows wild even in the most squalid corners of our world; ultimately bridging the distance between the life that lies before him, and a past he only narrowly escaped.
The beauty uncovered by Lucky is enhanced as much by the stunning visual compositions of Guez and DOP Francois Dagenais, as by a score composed by Toronto based music and new media producer Byron Wong.