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TRESE in Rogue (April 2012)

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In the April issue of ROGUE (yup, the one with Solenn Heussaff tempting you with a bar of Magnum) you'll also get to read Mixkaela Villalon's "A Guide to Recognizing Your Heroes"

The top five comic book characters in the article were Manix's "Rakenrol Guy" who was labelled as "The Lone Bro"; while Darna was labelled "The Head Bitch", Polgas is the "The Pinoy Muttley", Zsazsa Zaturnnah is "The Gay Aphrodite" and Trese is "The Bonafide Asskicker."

Also mentioned in a sidebar article were Andong Agimat, the Kubori Kikiams, Gerry Alanguilan's Elmer, Manix's reporter from News Hardcore, and Greg Narvas'"I Was A Teenage Filipino Skinhead"

Yes, TRESE is in this issue! So, please go and get it! :-)

Haring Bakal

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The Mind Body Kick Ass Team travels to the Philippines and learns about agimat and anting-anting. 
Below is a related article about Haring Bakal.

The powerful 'Utol' Jess April 26, 2004 / Inquirer News Service 
http://www.inq7.net/lif/2004/apr/27/lif_22-1.htm

MEMBERS of Haring Bakal (King Iron) in Lipa, Batangas hold Jess Verallo in high esteem. I learned that among amulet aficionados, there is a hierarchy of the powers that people possess, and Jess' occupies one of the highest ranks.

Before the blessing, we listened to members' stories about the powers of their amulets. Jess related how, on one occasion, he was threatened by a group of armed men. Alone and armed only with a bolo (machete), he said an oracion or secret prayer, and the men suddenly scampered away.

I asked why, and he said they might have seen something. He did not elaborate. I suspect he was referring to the powerful spirit guides he could call in times of danger.

On another occasion, an anting-anting (amulet) owner showed him his mutya (talisman), boasting it was very powerful. Jess put the object into his mouth and bit it. The mutya crumbled like powder. When told about it, the owner said, "Maybe it's your teeth that got broken."

Jess handed the broken amulet to him and the man shouted, "Oh, it's a fake!" He invited Jess to his house and asked for the oracion used to break the mutya.

Temple of God

Jess said he used no oracion or power word. "My amulet is in my very person, because my body is the temple of God," he explained.

Jess' reputation as a possessor of unusual powers was sealed when he revived his niece who drowned while swimming in a lake. She drowned at 7 a.m. and the lifeless body was recovered at 11 p.m. Jess summoned the girl's spirit to return to her body and she revived. Until now, the girl is still alive. This story has been told and retold in the village and beyond.

Another incredible story was told to us by a member of Verallo's group. "One day," he said, "a jeep's brakes [failed while the vehicle was going down a] steep road leading to the house of Jun Verallo. Jess was driving a jeep going up the same hill. The driver kept shouting, 'I have no brakes! I have no brakes.' " Before the vehicle could hit Verallo's jeep, so the story goes, it stopped and remained motionless until Jess could swerve to the side to avoid a collision. The jeep then continued to go down hill and crashed.

"My dream," Utol Jess said, "is to put on the right path all who ask help from me. I do not want even one of them to be taken advantage of or be in danger."

Jess now has followers throughout Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

History of Haring Bakal

Very little is known about the history and background of Haring Bakal. According to Jess Verallo, it began in Mindanao in the late 1800s. It was founded by Dodong Aquilino Lagari Gulang.
The organization aims to protect the weak and those whose lives are threatened by dangerous elements, to fight evil and help the government. To be protected, one has to join the brotherhood. A member has to be blessed. The blessing includes being hacked with a very sharp bolo or a sword several times in different parts of the body.

The number of times one gets hacked determines his ranking or status in the brotherhood. Initially one gets six strikes, later 21, then 36 and finally, 57, for a total of 120. The 36 strikes include the nape and the 57 strikes include the two sides of the neck as well as the head.

Once a person has been properly blessed by an authorized "blessor," he becomes a member of Haring Bakal. He will then receive a prayer to be said every day and has to wear a special red T-shirt on which are written sacred words or oracion of protection. This becomes the member's only anting-anting or amulet. Members of Haring Bakal, unlike other amulet believers, do not carry medallions or other metallic or wooden amulets in their body. They believe the oracions, which are taken from the Holy Book and come directly from God, protect them from knives and bullets, and even sorcery and accidents.

Every new member recites the Oath of Allegiance that says, among other things, he will "love God and obey His commandments, instill the spirit of Christianism and to serve and defend my country without mental reservations."

When founder Dodong Lagari died, no one was appointed to replace him as overall head. It remains vacant and members still consider him the head of the organization. The others are called chapter heads or presidents but a head "blessor" is higher than a president.

Clearances

Before one is initiated into the organization, he must submit clearances from the police, National Bureau of Investigation and barangay (village or neighborhood). He should also have a drug clearance.

News of Haring Bakal members' ability to ward off bullets and knives has led to a significant increase in membership. Especially eager to join are military and police personnel whose lives are always in danger. Today, estimates of Haring Bakal membership throughout the Philippines range from 300,000 to one million.

Members strictly adhere to a code of ethics requiring them to protect, not to harm, people. Violators are expelled. Some of those expelled later formed their own organizations and adopted some of the rituals and practices of Haring Bakal. Thus, it is not easy to determine overall membership.

ARTICLE ORIGINALLY POSTED AT: http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum/index.php?s=ed8e177e531c1f2705c9a7a67f1ca132&showtopic=15631http://www.inq7.net/lif/2004/apr/27/lif_22-1.htm

Trese tattoo

mythicalwear

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Ian Sta. Maria's tshirt designs for GRAPHIC-T, California.
See more of Ian's art at: http://iantoy.deviantart.com/

sirena

maria makiling

bakunawa


Kajo Assembles the Avengers

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AVENGERS ASSEMBLE! Check out Kajo's awesome sketches up for auction at Comic Odyssey's Free Comic Book Day (FCBD) this Saturday (May 5)! Done with Pen, Ink, and Light Gray Marker on art board. Each panel is letter sized with total dimensions of 17 x 22 inches. Starting bid at only P100. Auction is for the benefit of Tony DeZuniga.

Ragnarok MALAYA Map

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I heard about this new expansion the world of Ragnarok a couple of months ago. I'm always excited and happy to find out whenever I hear that creatures from Philippine myth are being used in stories, shows, games that are made by foreign companies; like the time a suspect in CSI was said to be an aswang and those episodes when Blade came over to the Philippines and fought a giant manananggal.

So, it's great to see how players here and around the world will learn more about our myth and folklore. Check out the Malaya map of Ragnarok, that's filled with tikbalang, mananaggal, bangungot and a bakunawa.




There is a place of legend, where the spirits of nature mingle with the stuff of fairy tales. The people of Port Malaya have lived in peace for a long time, but a dark force is slowly creeping in, corrupting everything and turning once harmless spirits into fearful monsters!

The citizens of Port Malaya need courageous new heroes to combat this threat and rid their once-peaceful land of evil once and for all. Will you answer the call?

Get ready to go on an adventure closer to home as Philippine Ragnarok Online prepares to launch its most anticipated update, Episode 25: Port Malaya! Explore a whole new world and battle monsters based on our own Philippine folklore and legend!

http://ragnarok.levelupgames.ph/episode25/


A very scary looking bakunawa

The Bakunawa trying to be cute

A very kawaii bangungot

a jejeling ... probably the scariest monster from Philippine myth

the manananggal that's also a nurse

this tikbalang looks tough

psycho tiyanak

Editor At Large

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It’s been a week since Summer Komikon 2012 and I haven’t had the chance to talk about the comic books that we launched.

Me and Kajo had this grand plan to release the new Trese book last week, but several things kept me busy and we were only able to release “Maverick Rider”, the first case from what will be Trese Book 5.

Aside from my wonderful dayjob, my nights were filled with editing the following comic book projects:

TIKTIK: THE ASWANG CHRONICLES
Story and character creation by Erik Matti and Dondon Monteverde.
Script by Erik Matti. Addiiotnal scenes and diaglogues by Michiko Yamamoto and Jade Castro. 
Edited by Budjette Tan.
Published by Reality Entertainment. Inc.  and Agosto Dos Pictures, Inc.

Last September 2011, I got a call to meet up with movie producer Dondon Monteverde and director Erik Matti. They showed me the initial edit to their new movie TIKTIK: THE ASWANG CHRONICLES starring Dingdong Dantes, Lovi Poe, Ramon Bautista, Joey Marquez, and Janice de Belen.

What makes this movie different from the usual Pinoy horror movie is that they shot the entire film in a studio and everything was shot against a green screen. Similar to the process done in “300” and “Sin City”, TIKTIK’s world will be completely computer generated. Of course, all the aswang will also CG’d! Since it would take them a year to do all those SFX, they still wanted a way to get people excited about the movie months before the actual screening.

So, they thought of releasing a comic book adaptation and asked me to help them put it together.

Working with Direk Erik, I adapted and edited down the two hour movie into a 60-page comic book.

We then brought in James Palabay, Melvin “Taga-Ilog” Calingo, Jon “Codename: Bathala” Zamar and the rest of the Digital Art Chefs to bring the comic book to page.

And just like many action-suspense movies, the copies of TIKTIK arrived in the nick of time, with James crashing through the gates of the Komikon with copies at hand. (Okay, he didn’t really crash into anything.)

Later in the afternoon, the crowd was surprised by the arrival of Dingdong Dantes and Lovi Poe, who came to talk to about the comic book and the movie.
Dave Yu, the SFX director of the movie, also went up on stage and talked about the process of creating the world of TIKTIK and bringing aswang to life.

I can only hope and wish that TIKTIK the comic book and the movie much success. If all goes well, then they plan to make more ASWANG CHRONICLES movies and in between all those movies, they might just make more comics.

Can you imagine the possibilities?!

For the first time, a movie company is investing in the comic book medium to promote and push the world of their story forward.

If all goes well, then, knowing the “gaya-gaya” mentality of the Pinoy, maybe the movie producers of the Metro Manila Film Fest will also want to have comic book adaptations of their movies. They might even want to do spin-offs or sequels or prequels.

If all goes well, then it will put the spotlight on the need for more comic book creators.

SKYWORLD : Volume 1 and Volume 2
Story by Mervin Ignacio
Art by Ian Sta. Maria
Edited by Budjette Tan
Published by National Bookstore

Ten years ago, Mervin and Ian met for the first time and it was love at first sight. (Okay, I’m making that up!) Mervin and Ian met because a sideline project and while having a smoke, their small talk lead to their love for comic books and how they wished someone would make a comic book that really delved into Philippine myth and folklore.

Cut-to: a decade later and they have finally taken that glimmer of an idea and made it into a 300-page epic.

The funny thing is, when the guys were putting together the first book, they asked me to look at it, I gave my comments, and when they comic book was printed, I was suddenly labeled editor. And thus, I became SKYWORLD’s editor. But with the combined power of me, Mervin, and Ian, a typo always seems to escape our attention. (For example, if you have the first printing of Skyworld Book 1, you will notice, in the fine print, that it was “Copywrite (C)2007”)

Aside from finally bringing this centuries-spanning fantasy to a close, I’m also happy that National Bookstore agreed to publish this two volume graphic novel.
After ELMER, I was wondering if they would venture into doing more comic books and I’m just glad they picked SKYWORLD to be their next title.

So, aside from movie companies exploring the comic book medium, we now have the country’s largest bookstore publishing comic books. What else can go right?


Edited by Paolo Chikiamco and Budjette Tan
Published by Summit Media

I remember having a discussion with some friends (or did it all happen online somewhere?) about the viability of the comic book medium in the Philippines. At that time, we were saying, your best bet is to produce a graphic novel that can be distributed in bookstores. Rather than try and publish a monthly comic book, to try and scrabble to meet that monthly deadline, to try and scrounge for enough funds to print it on a monthly basis, it would be better to just finish a 80 to 100 page graphic novel (which is, roughly, the length of a 4 to 5 issue mini-series) and release it in one go. And if you’re lucky, if you can find a publisher who likes it, then you don’t have to spend for printing and promoting it.

But, the thought of a monthly (or bi-monthly) comic book publication still lingered at the back of my head. I knew that attempting to do a monthly title (like Marvel and DC) would prove difficult unless you had a dedicated team working on it, which means you’ll need to pay this team on a monthly basis. In the past, there have been many attempts to release a monthly comic book. Even though they lasted a couple of years, they were not able to release it on a regular basis.
Which lead me to believe that the one-shot graphic novel was still the best route.

And yet, every Komikon, I take look at the pile of photocopied comics I bought, and for the ones that like, I always wish there was a way to get them into the hands of more readers. I also wished that more people got to know our local comic book writers and artists.

So, what if, instead of trying to release one title about one character, written and drawn by one creative team, there was a way to “crowd source” a comic book anthology. The stories would be made up of one-shot stories (so, we don’t need to worry about serial stories whose ending might never see the light of day or take ten years to finish)

For years, I have been pitching comic book ideas to Summit Media, hoping the country’s largest magazine company would produce local graphic novels.

In 2009, Summit took a chance with my idea for a comic book anthology of horror stories. We launched UNDERPASS during the Komikon, where it was well-received. But when it was distributed in the bookstores, it only sold a couple of thousand copies and didn’t merit a second issue. I talked to people about it, got their thoughts and ideas about why it didn’t work and what would make it better. With my list of mistakes, I had a checklist of “what not to do”.

If “horror” wasn’t something that would work for the local magazine scene, then what should the content of the anthology be?

And maybe it shouldn’t be a “comics anthology”. Maybe it should be a “comics magazine” or a comic book disguised as magazine, so that it’ll be easier to pitch to advertisers.

Maybe “fantasy” was the way to go. “Fantasy” would cover majority of the comic book stories being locally produced. It would easy to pitch to sponsors that the magazine is like a “fantaserye in comic book form”.

The more I thought about what I wanted to put in the magazine, the more I realized that it was already being done by Paolo Chikiamco in his website: www.rocketkapre.com. His site already reviewed and did interviews with fantasy creators. He also published/uploaded fantasy ebooks. The only thing he didn’t have in his site, were comic book stories.

In December 2010, I sent an email to Paolo, pitching to him the idea of a magazine version of RocketKapre. Turns out he had a better idea. He realized there was a gap in the market: no one was talking to the young-adult (YA) reader. We have all these kids (ok, they’re not all “kids”) who love reading Harry Potter, The Hunger Games, Percy Jackson, Twilight, Vampire Dairies --  but what happens after they’re done with those books? Was it possible to offer them something else, something that was uniquely Pinoy, stories that had a touch of Philippine myth, folklore, and history?

We wanted the magazine to have comic book stories, prose stories, interviews and reviews, as well as a “how to” section. We envisioned the magazine to be entertaining enough for reader to want to collect it, but informative enough so that schools would want to subscribe to it and have it available in their libraries. 

With those guidelines in place, we put together a sample issue, pitched it to Summit, and thank God, they said to publishing this “pilot issue”.

Much like the “pilot episode” of a TV show, the chances of Kwentillion becoming a “regular series” is in the hands of the viewer (or in this case, the reader).  Because if and when KWENTILLION becomes a regular monthly (or bi-monthly) comics magazine, then it will become a venue for new comic book characters to be told, a chance to meet and get to know more Filipino authors and artists, and more importantly, an opportunity to share and tell a million new stories.

As of this writing, KWENTILLION has been spotted in several branches of National Bookstore, Powerbooks, and BestSellers. We hope it will be found in a branch near you.

I’ll give an update as to when SKYWORLD Volume 1 and 2, and TIKTIK: THE ASWANG CHRONICLES will be sent out to the stores.

I hope that these comic books signal a start in the Philippine comic book scene. I hope that it will be the beginning of many opportunities for comic book writers and artists to share their craft and their stories. Of course, for these comic books to succeed, it is important that it gets the support of as many readers as possible. So, if you like any of these books then LIKE their pages on Facebook and hit the SHARE button to tell all your friends about them.




Now that these projects are all done, I hope you don’t mind if I go back to writing Trese. See you at the October KOMIKON!



Trese and Ambush team-up

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JUMP
Story by Budjette Tan 
Art by Andrew Villar

Art Republik Interview

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Many thanks to Betty Regala for including me / interviewing me for their show ART REPUBLIK.
My bit starts at 16:35 into the interview. http://youtu.be/7hvuONdJmY4?t=16m35s

Art Republik's Episode 9: Skin, Street and Comics is part of the First Season of the show aired on Knowledge Channel, SkyCable 42. For more information on Art Republik, like them on Facebook, www.facebook.com/artrepublik

Trese Shirt, designed by Kajo

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This TRESE1 shirt, designed by Kajo, based on the cover of Trese Book1, will be available this Saturday at the Komikon Indieket event. (Bayanihan Center, Pioneer St., Pasig City) More details at: http://www.komikon.org/.

Shirts will be sold at P500 during the event.

Kajo's Marvel Try-out Pages

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DAREDEVIL story/ script by Mark Waid

Precinto 13: MIDNIGHT PATROL

Trese Book 4 Finalist in National Book Awards

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"The National Book Development Board (NBDB) and the Manila Critics Circle (MCC) are pleased to announce the finalists for this year’s National Book Awards. The names of the winners will be revealed during the awarding ceremonies that will be held on November 17 at the National Museum."

GRAPHIC LITERATURE
1.Private Iris Case 18: The Programmer’s Puzzle, by Jaime Bautista and Arnold Arre, Blue Cow
2.Trese 4: Last Seen After Midnight, by Budjette Tan and Kajo Baldisimo, Visprint 
 
MANILA CRITICS CIRCLE SPECIAL PRIZE FOR AN EBOOK
1.Alternative Alamat, by Paolo Chikiamco, Flipside Digital Content Company
2.High Society, by Paolo Chikiamco and Hannah Buena, Flipside Digital Content Company
3.The Long Weekend: A Komix Novella, by Adam David, Flipside Digital Content Company
4.The Top 25 Power Words Every Call Center Agent Should Know, by Rye Gutierrez, Flipside Digital Content Company
 
 
In the middle of a very hectic workday, I got a text and an email from our publisher that Trese Book 4 (Last Seen After Midnight) is a finalist in the 2011 National Book Awards, in the Best Graphic Literature Category. I texted Kajo the great news and he replied: Nakakawala ng pagod, Budj. Sarap. Later that day, I got five new pages from Kajo. (Yes, we are making good progress on Book 5 of Trese.)

Was also happy to see some familiar names nominated in this year's National Book Awards.

Jamie Bautista and Arnold Arre's PRIVATE IRIS is a finalist in the Graphic Literature category.

Paolo Chikiamco, my co-editor in Kwentillion, is a finalist for his Alternative Alamat anthology, which, by the way, has a Trese story. Paolo's comic book story "High Society" is also a finalist in the eBook category, as well as, Adam David's "The Long Weekend: A Komix Novella".

I do hope more people check out these books, as well as the other books nominated for the National Book Awards. Below is a link to the complete list of finalists.











How to order TRESEv1 shirts

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Available sizes: XS, S, M, L, XL
P500 (plus shipping and handling)

Available sizes: XS, S, M, L, XL
P500 (plus shipping and handling)

Order TRESEv1 shirts now! 
Available sizes: XS, S, M, L, XL 
All shirts are P500 (plus shipping and handling) 

Send your orders to : treseshirts@gmail.com 
Expect a reply from Ria Fermin, our TreseMerch Manager

Based on the number of shirts and where your order will be shipped, Ria will tell you the additional cost of shipping and mode of payment. 

UPDATE: Shirts are now available at Comic Odyssey, Robinsons Galleria


Coming Soon! MANILA NOIR

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Launched with the summer '04 award-winning best seller Brooklyn Noir, Akashic Books (
http://www.akashicbooks.com/manilanoir.htm ) continues its groundbreaking series of original noir anthologies. Each book is comprised of all-new stories, each one set in a distinct neighborhood or location within the geographical area of the book.

Fresh noir from one of the most intense, congested, and overpopulated cities in the world.

Original stories by: Lourd De Veyra, Gina Apostol, Budjette Tan & Kajo Baldisimo, F.H. Batacan, Jose Dalisay Jr., Eric Gamalinda, Jessica Hagedorn, Angelo Lacuesta, R. Zamora Linmark, Rosario Cruz-Lucero, Sabina Murray, Jonas Vitman, Marianne Villanueva, and Lysley Tenorio.

ONE OF THE MOST POPULOUS cities in the world, Manila provides the ideal, torrid setting for noir. It's where the rich rub shoulders with the poor, where five-star hotels coexist with squatter settlements, where religious zeal coexists with superstition, where "hospitality" might be another word for prostitution, where politics is often synonymous with celebrity and corruption, where violence is nothing out of the ordinary and pretty much anything can be had for a price.

JESSICA HAGEDORN was born in Manila and now lives in New York. A novelist, poet, and playwright, her published works include Toxicology, Dream Jungle, The Gangster Of Love, Danger and Beauty, and Dogeaters, which was a finalist for the National Book Award in fiction. She also edited both volumes of the groundbreaking anthology, Charlie Chan Is Dead: An Anthology of Contemporary Asian American Fiction. Visit her website at www.jessicahagedorn.net

From the Introduction by Jessica Hagedorn:
Manila is not for the faint of heart. Built on water and reclaimed land, it’s an intense, congested, teeming megalopolis, the vital core of an urban network of sixteen cities and one municipality collectively known as Metro Manila. Population: over ten million and growing by the minute. Climate: tropical. Which means hot, humid, prone to torrential monsoon rains of biblical proportions. 

I think of Manila as the ultimate femme fatale. Complicated and mysterious, with a tainted, painful past. She’s been invaded, plundered, raped, and pillaged, colonized for four hundred years by Spain and fifty years by the US, bombed and pretty much decimated by Japanese and American forces during an epic, month-long battle in 1945. 
Yet somehow, and with no thanks to the corrupt politicians, the crime syndicates, and the indifferent rich who rule the roost, Manila bounces back. The people’s ability to endure, adapt, and forgive never ceases to amaze, whether it’s about rebuilding from the latest round of catastrophic flooding, or rebuilding from the ashes of a horrific world war, or the ashes of the brutal, twenty-year dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos . . .

Many years have passed since the end of the Marcos dictatorship. People are free to write and say what they want, yet nothing is different. The poor are still poor, the rich are still rich, and overseas workers toil in faraway places like Saudi Arabia, Israel, Germany, and Finland. Glaring inequities are a source of dark humor to many Filipinos, but really just another day in the life . . .

Writers from the Americas and Europe are known for a certain style of noir fiction, but the rest of the world approaches the crime story from a culturally unique perspective. In Manila Noir we find that the genre is flexible enough to incorporate flamboyant emotion and the supernatural, along with the usual elements noir fans have come to expect: moody atmospherics, terse dialogue, sudden violence, mordant humor, a fatalist vision.


Manila Noir
edited by Jessica Hagedorn
published by Akashic Books

Mystery/Fiction Anthology
A Trade Paperback Original
ISBN-13: 978-1-61775-160-8
e-ISBN: 978-1-61775-176-9
280 pages | $15.95

Trese Weekend

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September 15 (Saturday)

See you guys this Saturday at TEAM MANILA (1st level of the New Wing of Market! Market!) September 15, 2 pm. Me and Kajo will be there to sign your books (yes, copies of Trese will be available at Team Manila stores) and we'll even sign your Team Manila x Trese shirts.


September 16 (Sunday)


On Sunday, me and Kajo will be at the 33rd Manila International Book Fair (MIBF), along with Mervin Ignacio and Ian Sta. Maria of SKYWORLD. We will be at the National Bookstore booth from 2pm to 3pm. Come over and we will gladly sign, doodle, and vandalize your comic books.


Trese 5 MIDNIGHT TRIBUNAL

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In a city where the aswang control everything that is illegal and where ancient gods seek to control everything else, enforcing the law can be a very difficult task. 

 When crime takes a turn for the weird, the police normally call Alexandra Trese. Lately, it seems like others have been taking that call. 

A mysterious racer has been breaking the speed limit, running after and capturing criminals. 
A masked giant has been demolishing drug dens and breaking up gangs. 

 Trese must confront these supernatural crime-fighters and bring order back to the city, before the underworld attempts to seek balance in its own way. 

TRESE: MIDNIGHT TRIBUNAL 
Budjette Tan and KaJo Baldisimo 
Winners of the Philippine National Book Awards for Best Graphic Literature 

Trese Book 5 should be available in all bookstores by mid-November.To make sure your favorite book store orders copies, please go to their Customer Service Counter and place an order for the book. Give the following information found below. They should get your contact info/telephone number and they'll get in touch with you when your order arrives. Thank you very much for waiting and for all the support!

TRESE: Midnight Tribunal
By: Budjette Tan and KaJo Baldisimo
ISBN:  971-05451-8-3
B and W Graphic Novel
SRP: P150.00

Trese 5 Book Signing Sessions

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National Book Store presents TRESE 5 book signing sessions




Be there for the launch of the special NBS Edition of TRESE 5: MIDNIGHT TRIBUNAL.
This version comes with an Exclusive NBS Dustcover.



Join Budjette Tan and Kajo Baldisimo, creators of the award-winning graphic novel TRESE, for an afternoon of mysteries and revelations.

Ask them questions about the underworld. Check out the Trese art gallery.
Get the chance to win Trese art work and shirts. Stick around for the book signing session.

November 10, 4pm: Bestsellers, Robinsons Galleria, Ortigas
Hosted by Karen Kunawicz

November 24, 4pm: National Bookstore, Alabang Town Center
Hosted by Yvette Tan

Trese 4 wins 2011 National Book Award

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PRESS RELEASE

“Trese” wins National Book Award, Best Graphic Literature for 2011

Trese Book 4: Last Seen After Midnight, written by Budjette Tan, illustrated by Kajo Baldisimo was awarded Best Graphic Literature for 2011 at the National Book Awards.

The award was received by Tan, Baldisimo and their publisher Nida Ramirez of Visprint, Inc.

Kajo Baldisimo, Budjette Tan, Ruel de Vera, Nida Ramirez, Manix Abera

This is the second time that National Book Development Board and the Manila Critics Circle have recognized and awarded the works of Tan and Baldisimo. Last 2010, Trese Book 3 won the same award.

Trese follows the adventures of paranormal investigator Alexandra Trese. She is the main consultant of the police whenever they encounter crime involving supernatural creatures. In Trese Book 4, she is called to solve the murder of a manananggal, stop a plant elemental from committing a massacre, investigate a case involving a bangungnot, and reveal the secret of the country’s champion prize-fighter.


Ruel de Vera of the Manila Critic Circles, wrote in his introduction for Trese 4: “With each case, Budjette and Kajo raise their levels of artistry to new heights without ever resorting to gimmickry, relying instead on an expertise in the unexpected twist and self-awareness, a feat that transcends the tropical islands Trese originates from. From a cult hit, Trese has now become a true mainstream success—which it deserves—and the next step should be widespread international recognition—which it deserves as well.”

In the past two years, Trese has received much praise from here and abroad.

"Trese continues to impress and surprise, daring to go where no Filipino comic book dare to go," said Gerry Alanguilan, creator of the award-winning graphic novel Elmer. 

Leinil Yu, artist of Marvel’s Indestructible Hulk said, "Trese excites the little child in me which used to believe in the wonders of Filipino folklores, and my adult self who enjoys intelligently written and drawn tales.  Budjette and Kajo's Trese is a gem"

Aaron Rahsaan Thomas, Executive Producer of Southland and writer/producer of CSI:New York, had this to say about the graphic novel: “The late Steve Sabol of NFL films once said, ‘Tell me a fact and I’ll remember. Tell me the truth and I’ll believe. But, tell me a story and it’ll live in my heart forever.’ It is a unique and admirable skill to craft a well told story set in an intriguing world, inhabited by compelling characters. Yet, every time I open a chapter of the Trese saga, I’m blown away by Budjette’s imagination and by Kajo’s imagery. They’ve created a series full of swagger, featuring one of the most dynamic heroines you’ll ever see. Trese is thrilling, engaging and epic.”

"From the first moment I got a glimpse into the world of Alexandra Trese, I was hooked,” said Shanty Harmayn, CEO at Salto Film Company, Producer of the award-wining Indonesia film “Sang Penari” (The Dancer) “It was wonderfully new and exciting, yet somehow familiar as many of the supernatural creatures and their stories were similar to the tales I grew up hearing in Indonesia. With Budjette's masterful ability to weave a great mystery and Kajo's beautiful graphic imagery, I look forward to visiting Trese's world many times over."

In 2011, after Trese 4 ended up on National Book Store’s Best Seller List, Tan received this email from Neil Gaiman, “So ridiculously proud of you! When I came out all those years ago for the first time, that was what I wanted to see happen... I feel like you and all the smart Filipino writers and artists out there are doing something really brave and powerful, making a whole new wave of Filipino art and story.Well done!”

National Book Awards was held last November 17, 2011 and was presented by The National Book Development Board and the Manila Critics Circle in cooperation with the National Commission for Culture and the Arts. The event was held at the Old Senate Session Hall of the National Museum of the Philippines.


National Book Award Trophy designed by Michael Allen R. Cacnio

November 24 TRESE book signing

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National Book Store presents 
the TRESE 5 book signing session.
National Bookstore, Alabang Town Center
November 24, 4pm

Join us and get the chance to meet Trese and the Kambal!
Models: Malbin Hung, Joy Wilgin Ong and Kim Wilgin Ong, Photo: Katherine Lei Caparas, Artwork: Malbin Hung


Be there for the launch of the special NBS Edition of TRESE 5: MIDNIGHT TRIBUNAL.
This version comes with an Exclusive NBS Dustcover.



Join Budjette Tan and Kajo Baldisimo, creators of the award-winning graphic novel TRESE, for an afternoon of mysteries and revelations.

Ask them questions about the underworld. Check out the Trese art gallery.
Get the chance to win Trese art work and shirts. Stick around for the book signing session.
Have your pictures take with the Trese and Kambal cosplayers!
Hosted by Yvette Tan, author of WAKING THE DEAD

See you this Saturday!


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