Showing posts with label filipino. Show all posts
Showing posts with label filipino. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

Aishite Imasu (Mahal Kita) 1941 (2004)

aishite imasu (mahal kita) 1941 movie poster

Did I enjoy my heart getting ripped out again and again while watching this movie? Oh, you bet I did, to the fullest.

Aishite Imasu (Mahal Kita) 1941 is a movie set at a town called San Nicolas, during the Japanese occupation in the Philippines. It begins with an old woman with a story. While she reminisces, we see her childhood, her past loves, her heartaches, her hardships, and the difficulties she had encountered while attempting to live in a world occupied by foreigners with an unknown tongue.

The cast includes rather popular Filipino stars, with Judy Ann Santos, Dennis Trillo and Raymart Santiago playing key roles in this poignant movie. Still, it is no ordinary drama; it is one with heart, background, and plenty of drawn-out emotions. Oh, and let's not forget the guerrilla background, the gay love, and the brutal, bloody tortures. (Well, with a screenplay co-written by Ricky Lee, what else could we expect?)

It's not quite as gritty as Oro, Plata, Mata, a Filipino film with Japanese occupation also as its subject matter. In truth, I was rather put off sometimes by the poetic license that the director, Joel Lamangan, used to portray the war scenes. They looked a little too clean for them to be realistic.

Nevertheless, the heart-wrenching tugs that this movie gave me were very effective. In fairness to the cast, the acting they did was great; the scenes really brought out tears into my eyes. The story-telling was also well-done, making me feel happy, sad, angry and aloof all in a span of 2 minutes. Amazing.

Don't take my word for it though; this film won multiple awards (check out the Wikipedia page and the IMDb page), and rightly so. This movie is not something that a lot of Filipino big budget companies seemingly like to come up with nowadays. It is shocking, it is bloody, it tackles homosexuality, it is 2 hours long.

Great film, and I wouldn't mind crying over it again.

Rating: 4.75 / 5 (because the war scenes were too clean. Otherwise, dazed and amazed)


(Watched March 10, 2014)

Friday, March 22, 2013

Oro Plata Mata

oro plata mata

Nitty, gritty film about the lives of the bourgeois in the midst of war. The sparkling linen to the bloodstained bandages, the innocent flirting to the perverse sex, the smiles and laughter to the quiet remembrance. Interesting look at man's character when driven to desperation. I love the symbolism of the diwata, and the steely doctor. I also love how the film begins and how it ends. Great film.

Rating: 5 / 5

(Watched Mar. 9, 2013)

Monday, March 4, 2013

Apat Dapat, Dapat Apat: Friends 4 Lyf and Death

apat dapat

Begins with foreshadowing, and ends with a bang - an unexpected-yet-expected ending. (Convenient wrap up, I must say.) Has all the elements of a typical masa movie: comedy, drama, action, tragedy, religion, love, and a bunch of larger-than-life characters.

Cinematography wise, Filipino cinema at that time still had a long way to go (this was shown in theaters in 2007), but the acting was pretty good. Good for a laughtrip at the expense of Filipino domestic helpers, but it caught my eye to see how they scratched the surface of that issue. (I felt very much for those who choose to become OFWs for the sake of their families.)

The smuggling angle (because there is one!) was fun, but obviously not true to life. Still - fun!

It's cute and funny enough, I suppose, but more of an "it's ok" for me. (The rating may change in time, though.)


Rating: 2 / 5

(Watched March 1, 2013)
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