• About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
Donate
The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
No Result
View All Result

H.P. Mendoza Talks ‘The Secret Art of Human Flight’ and Being Unapologetically Queer and Filipino

Jericho Tadeo by Jericho Tadeo
June 28, 2023
in Interview
0
H.P. Mendoza on the set of The Secret Art of Human Flight.

Photo Courtesy of Chicago Media Angels

H.P. Mendoza and I meet via Zoom on the last day that his newest film, The Secret Art of Human Flight, is playing at Tribeca Film Festival 2023. Immediately — because how could we not — we talk about how rare it is for each of us to encounter someone else who’s Filipino, let alone someone who’s both queer and Filipino, on either side of these interviews. “I can count on, maybe, one and a half hands how many Filipino journalists I’ve talked to,” Mendoza says. “So, right now, I’m feeling a lot more comfortable.”

Of course, the bigger celebration is the fact that this year’s Tribeca marks Mendoza’s festival debut, one that he describes as “surreal” because of how long it’s taken him to get here. “Every single film I’ve submitted to Tribeca [was rejected]. It’s always after the fact, when I get to meet a programmer, that they’re like, ‘You were this close. If only you were this, if only you were that,’” he says. “I’d find out that Tribeca had a theme that year, and between 2005 and now, it’s not hard to imagine that there was never a Filipino-themed year.”

This isn’t to say that Mendoza bears any ill will towards Tribeca and its programmers. On the contrary, he reflects on the perfect timing of “being on this side of the velvet rope” this year with this film in particular: “Had this happened to me any earlier, I wouldn’t have been as ready. Every premiere I’ve had [before] has been local, queer, and/or Asian film festivals, so for me to fly to New York to premiere this film that no one’s ever seen — it’s intense, but I’m loving it.”

The Secret Art of Human Flight follows Ben (Grant Rosenmeyer, who also serves as co-producer) in the midst of grieving the death of his wife Sarah (Reina Hardesty). He turns to a self-help book written by self-proclaimed guru, Mealworm (Paul Raci), that he buys via the dark web. Per the film’s title, the book aims to teach Ben how to fly. When Mealworm shows up on Ben’s doorstep, Ben must undergo a series of unorthodox trials and changes designed to help him achieve his goal of flight. Naturally, this raises eyebrows and alarm bells for the loved ones around him, who are doing their best to guide Ben through this dark time.

What immediately drew Mendoza to directing this film was the fact that it wasn’t one he had written, a prospect that he calls “freeing.” “I get to take someone else’s work, and I get to put so much of myself into it,” he says. “The way I directed this, the way I composed the music, and edited this is so unabashedly me that I would like to think that anyone who’s been following my work for the past 20 years would say, ‘Oh, this is something else, but [still] feels queer and Asian.’”

RelatedStories

Siyou Tan headshot and a still from the movie Amoeba

Siyou Tan Tackles Delinquent Behaviour in Singapore

April 21, 2026
Meaghan Rath as Anushka Bhattachera-Phister and Curtis Lum as Tim Kwan sitting at a table in The Audacity

Curtis Lum Discusses ‘The Audacity’ and the Thrill of Playing the Corporate Climber

April 14, 2026

At one point in our interview, Mendoza jokes — “I don’t know if it’s going to make me sound super Asian or not” — about his “mathematical” approach to The Secret Art of Human Flight.

“I wish I were more spiritual about it, but maybe this is just my version of spirituality — I basically treated the whole film as if we were shooting a musical and/or composing a piece of music together.”

Indeed, while shooting, “finding the rhythm,” as he calls it, was a continual direction he gave the actors, from the principal talent to the extras. He would even compose music on the spot by humming into his phone while directing. “There were moments in the movie, where people felt choreographed to the actual songs that I composed.”

The result is a film that is a delicate dance between absurdist comedy and an exploration of grief, while also leaning into horror territory and ideas of spirituality. This is most epitomized by Ben and Mealworm’s relationship, which is simultaneously earnest in the way the former leans on the expertise of the latter and somewhat terrifying when you remember they met via the dark web and the latter takes over his home and personal life.

“I needed a character dynamic, and I didn’t want to force one on them if we didn’t have time to rehearse it,” he says, which meant leaning into what was naturally already there between his actors, specifically Rosenmeyer and Raci. “Grant was in a space where he was — I won’t speak for him — going through his losses in the pandemic, [and] Paul was coming from a place of spirituality. He followed a bunch of different gurus who he knew were coming from places of turmoil, and so he was drawing from them.”

What’s more, to bolster the film, which could have easily slid into “dead wife movie” territory — wherein the wife’s death (and her character as a whole) is merely in service of the husband’s emotional journey — Mendoza was intentional in giving Sarah full presence in the movie even after her passing. So, taking advantage of the, in his words, “director’s pass” that he was granted, “I said, why don’t we have some scenes where we actually see what the relationship was like?” This largely ended up taking the form of video messages Sarah records for Ben peppered throughout the film, which unearth their lives (and, more importantly, their struggles) as self-publishing children’s book authors.

To edit the film, Mendoza used Adobe Premiere, a program that is perpetually open on all his computers. “It’s kind of unhealthy,” he jokes. “I have two Macs — I have a desktop Mac at home and I have my laptop — and I have this gaming PC and another PC for projection gaming. I have Premiere [on all the computers] because I’m always editing. When you’re someone like me, who doesn’t necessarily have a machine — I don’t have a big PR company that does ‘H.P. Mendoza stuff’ when it comes to my corporate work or my movies — I have to have Premiere open at all times.”

To close out our interview, the one thing Mendoza underscores is the kindness that permeated every step of production between everyone involved. “[Producer] Tina Carboni was a force on-set. She had this thing where she was all about good people,” he says. “We’ve spent the past 20 years in toxic environments, and people say that’s just the way things are supposed to be, and Tina and I are kind of like, ‘Oh yeah? Well, watch us.’ It shines through, and I’m really happy about that.”

Now Streaming On

JustWatch
Tags: H.P. MendozaThe Secret Art of Human FlightTribecaTribeca 2023USA
ShareTweet
Jericho Tadeo

Jericho Tadeo

Jericho started writing about film in 2019. In the time since, he has reviewed hundreds of movies and interviewed just as many industry artists. In addition to writing, he has also guest-starred on movie podcasts and even served as a film festival juror. He has covered major events, like Sundance and TIFF, and has been a member of GALECA since 2023.

Recommended For You

Izaac Wang Chris Wang and his family, Chang Li Hua as Nai Nai, Joan Chen as Chungsing Wang, and Shirley Chen as Vivian Wang, sit at their dinner table in Dìdi (弟弟).
Review

Dìdi (弟弟) Is Unruly as Pubescence Itself

Riz Ahmed as Changez Khan staring off in the distance in The Reluctant Fundamentalist.
Review

‘The Reluctant Fundamentalist’ Is a Flawed but Vital Critique of Post-9/11 America

Henry Golding as Nicholas laying in the lap of his partner in Daniela Forever
Review

Henry Golding’s ‘Daniela Forever’ Drowns Itself in Abstraction

Eddie Huang staring off in front of a playground in Vice Is Broke
Review

‘Vice Is Broke’ Breaks Down the Seduction of Cool

Photo still from The Harvest.
Review

‘The Harvest’ Bears Fruitful Exploration of Hmong Diaspora

Looking into The Queer Mirror of ‘Mulan’
Essay

Looking into The Queer Mirror of ‘Mulan’

June 14, 2024
Next Post
In Memory of CoCo Lee

In Memory of CoCo Lee

Popular Stories

Thinley Lhamo as Pema kneeling in the snow in prayer by a river with a white horse behind her in the movie Shambhala.

‘Shambhala’ Brings Peak Nepalese Cinema to The Global Stage

Zhu Yilong as Ma Zhe holding a flashlight investigating a scene in the Only the River Flows.

‘Only the River Flows’ Blends Existentialist Philosophy and Serial Killer Procedural

Gordon Cormier as Aang in season 1 of Avatar: The Last Airbender.

Netflix’s ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ Is an Exercise in Letting Go of the Past

Andrea Bang as Grace and Joe Scarpellino as Carter sitting across from each other in a dimly lit restaurant in Stay the Night.

Reel Asian 2022: ‘Stay the Night’ Is A Charming Torontonian Romance à la ‘Before Sunrise’

Haru Kuroki as Okiku kneeling on the ground in the street holding a man's hand as snow falls in the movie Okiku and the World.

Reel Asian 2023: ‘Okiku and the World’ Hits the Fan

  • About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Write For Us
  • Contact

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use