Give Up Tomorrow

2011, 95 minutes

Award-winning documentary about what is considered the process of the century in the Philippines. Give Up Tomorrow is a chronicle that exposes a Kafkaesque world of corruption, sensation-seeking media, two grieving mothers and a cesspit of injustice.

A criminal who didn’t commit the crime, a murder mystery without a body. If it weren’t a true story, you’d never believe it. In the late summer of 1997, the Chiong sisters went missing in Cebu, the Philippines. Shortly thereafter, a body of a girl was found in a valley – she had been raped and then murdered. People assumed it was one of the Chiong sisters, and the police arrested seven local boys. One of them was Paco Larrañaga, from a well-to-do family. Paco was targeted because he had a reputation for trouble, but at the time of the murder, he was hundreds of miles away in Manila, in the company of several fellow students. An open and shut case, one would think. But then Paco and his family are confronted with the corrupt Philippine legal authorities, who aren’t seeking justice, but rather judgement. In a rapid, captivating series of interviews, newspaper clippings, and archive footage, the filmmaker (who was personally involved in the case) describes how the seven random boys fell victim to a judicial error. He also shows how the entire legal system is like a Kafkaesque story, featuring false witnesses, cover-ups and human rights violations.

Credits

Themes
Crime, Justice and law, Racism and/or discrimination
Suitable for
havo/vwo - bovenbouw
mbo - niveau 3 & 4
Director
Michael Collins, Marty Syjuco
Country of production
United States
Type
Documentary
Duration
95 minutes
Year
2011
Age rating
16 angst geweld grof taalgebruik