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Monday, December 28, 2015

FB Scoop: Netizen Finds Giant Spider Cooked in the Vegetable Dish Served at Fastfood



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Fab or Drab: Meryll Soriano

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Repost: 'My Bebe Love' Breaks MMFF Opening Day Box Office Records


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Insta Scoop: MMFF Disqualifies Honor Thy Father

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FB Scoop: Dondon Monteverde's Statement on MMFF Decision to Disqualify 'Honor Thy Father' in Best Picture Category









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FB Scoop: Pia Wurtzbach's Mentor Calls the Attention of San Miguel for Using Wrong Photo

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Insta Scoop: Celebrities Who Spent Christmas Holiday with Their Families

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Sunday, December 27, 2015

Keeping Their Perspectives Real

Image courtesy of www.wikihow.com

When Female Talent (FT) and Newbie Male Discovery (MD) got together, they played with the rules of being in the limelight. In front of the camera, FT and MD were sweet and showing what was deemed to be true and unscripted feelings towards each other.

As days passed, their circumstance contributed to developing emotional attachment to each other. Capitalizing on the personal story of FT and the background and playfulness of MD, their show was generating interest from viewers. Soon, FT and MD were developing closeness that the viewers seemed to prefer. Their loveteam potential was promising.

However, there was a catch to the potential loveteam. After some unearthing, the past of MD came up and he was found out to be the alleged ex-boyfriend of Young Celebrity (YC). While the camp of YC has insisted that she has yet to have a relationship, the story of her involvement with MD was dismissed as mere rumor, or at the very least, a case of puppy love. Nonetheless, the story emerged.

Meanwhile, as days of togetherness turned into weeks of companionship, FT and MD started to pledge loyalty to each other. Both promised to wait for each other when the right moment comes and that meant once they were free from their commitment to a show. After several weeks, FT and MD were free and looking forward to a new future.

FT and MD are, of course, waiting for the right break that would propel them to fame and become the next important stars of their network. Moreover, the idea of being together hovered in their midst. Alas, any form of deepening their closeness will have to wait. YC, whose search for a reel love partner has been unsuccessful, suddenly came into picture. A project with her and MD was in the works and thus, FT will have to wait or accept the possibility that she will not be paired with MD anymore. Given the movements in their careers, the cliché of choosing career over love prevailed once again.

‘Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes. Don't resist them - that only creates sorrow. Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally forward in whatever way they like.’ -Lao Tzu

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Reader's Review: Honor Thy Father

Image courtesy of en.wikipedia.org

HONOR THY FATHER (Regal Films, 2015) : Starring John Lloyd Cruz, Meryll Soriano, Krystal Brimner, Tirso Cruz III

Directed by Erik Matti; Written by Erik Matti and Michiko Yamamoto

A Second Chance For Philippine Cinema
by. Atty. Ferdinand Topacio

The folly of excessive piety. Religion as business. Fighting back to gain respect. Greed trumping fraternal love and prudence. These are only some of the lessons “Honor Thy Father” teaches the viewer, with as much subtlety as being hit by in the face by a sledgehammer.

The plot itself is not your usual Filipino movie fare: A young couple, Edgar and Kaye (played by John Lloyd Cruz and Meryll Soriano, respectively) with an adorable young daughter Angel (Krystal Brimner), experience a series of setbacks: their daughter falls gravely ill of dengue and almost dies, they both lose their jobs when the company employing them folds, their business never gets off the ground. But thanks to their investment with Kaye’s father’s business, which pays handsome dividends, and – as Kaye firmly believes – her devotion to a cultish congregation called Church of Yeshua, their fortunes turn, and they become millionaires. This luck they share with their brethren in the church by persuading them to also invest in Kaye’s father, and by tithing heavily. Edgar, though, is skeptical of Kaye’s religion, or more particularly, its leader (Tirso Cruz III), whom he thinks is a fraud.

Their good fortune is, however, short-lived as the bottom falls out from under the said business, which turns out to be a Ponzi scheme. Kaye’s father is abducted from his house and later found dead in a swamp. His body has not yet become cold, so to speak, and is lying in state at Kaye’s house, when they are swamped with irate investors asking for their money back. Kaye tries to reason with them, explaining that they, too, lost considerable money, but the mob would not be pacified. They invade the couple’s house and cart away all that they could. When Edgar tries to defend his home, he is attacked and savagely beaten.

The investors file a case before the prosecutor, but the couple is exonerated, as the investigation finds them to have been equally victimized. But some big investors, backed by politicians, are not so easily convinced: a prosperous-looking couple (Yayo Aguila and Dan Fernandez) kidnap Angel but returns her, giving Edgar and Kaye two weeks to produce 6 million pesos or else. Kaye approaches her “Bishop” to borrow church funds to save her family, but is rebuffed; incensed, Edgar nearly chokes the life out of the preacher. Desperate, Edgar buys a gun and tries to rob a financing company, only to lose heart at the last minute. He then goes back to his kin in the Mountain Province, which he left for a more urbanized lifestyle in Baguio City when he married Kaye. As it turns out, his family is engaged in gold mining, but moonlights as robbers from time to time, using their tunneling skills to dig out from under bank vaults to steal their contents. In the meantime, the kidnappers, getting antsy about the money, and this time abducts Kaye to insure that Edgar will return their investment. With Edgar’s family rallying behind him to save the lives of his wife and child, they plot to steal the church collections to ransom his wife.

It is in this dark and disturbing world of greed, violence and religious chicanery that John Lloyd Cruz shines as never before. Freed from the strictures of a formulaic dramatic movie, his thespic skills are given free rein, and how! With total economy of facial expressions and bodily gestures, JLC plays with absolute conviction the turbulent quiet of a man seething with internal turmoil. The conflict is at once palpable and restrained: the cynicism of a man in the midst of worship services; a husband who feels that his wife is responsible for all their woes but still tries to save her; a brother and son who disapproves of his family’s mode of living but is compelled to depend on them to save his family.

The thing is, no other actor could have pulled it off. JLC is the quintessential “everyman” in looks and demeanor, and his skills as an actor enables him to disappear into his role with seeming effortlessness. In “A Second Chance”, he proved that he could make more money than any other actor. In this movie, he proves that he can act better than any of them. Verily, no other actor in the present generation, or even a few generations back, can touch him when it comes to acting. His depth, intensity and emotive force are evocative of the early Bembol Roco and Philip Salvador.

Meryll Soriano is a revelation, playing deftly and intelligently the role of a wife in thralldom of her church’s leader, naively believing that all of her family’s problems can be solved by pure faith. It comes to a head when, after her unsuccessful talk with her “Bishop”, she exclaims to her husband, “Diyos ko”, and he shoots back with “Diyos mo!” A succinct exchange that underscores the futility of spiritual beliefs in the face of worldly woes. After seeing her performance, I dare declare that Soriano is one of the most underrated young actresses of our time, someone whose abilities are at least at par with the greats (Bea Alonzo, Claudine Barretto).

The rest of the cast do not disappoint. Special mention must be made of Tirso Cruz III, whom I started to admire after watching him in “Ikaw Lamang,” who read the part of the religious leader with equal measures cunning, creepiness and concern for the brethren.

This review would not be complete without mentioning the look of the film which, while typically dark and brooding Erik Matti, goes several grades beyond chiaroscuro. Light and shadow apropos for a film noir is elevated by the use of accentuated lighting in key scenes: fireflies at seaside, glowing lamps in subterranean locations, and even lights and shadows in a daytime scene, which to me are no easy achievements. And the internment scene at the cemetery, composed like a Japanese Edo-period painting, is one of the most visually striking I have seen in years!

In conclusion, “Honor Thy Father” is an important film that must be watched. It is a powerful commentary on religion, materialism and societal hypocrisy, contrasting at the same time paralleling the superficial purity of a church as a money machine for its officers and the criminality of an organization engaged in pyramiding, as well as a mining family engaged in robbery, saying that many churches and businesses are no better than crime families.

Interestingly, JLC fans who expect “hugot” lines need not feel neglected: quotable gems such as “Ang bukang-bibig Diyos, pero demonyo naman”, “Kung kaya ka nila, kakainin ka ng buhay”, and Edgar telling his siblings “Kahit anong katangahan ang gawin niya, asawa ko pa rin siya; kaya wala sa inyong puwedeng mambastos sa kanya”, are interspersed liberally in the screenplay.

Movies such as “Honor Thy Father” show what our movie makers are capable of, and should get the box office attention they deserve. They are our film industry’s second chance. And if we fail to take this chance, then we will have naught but ourselves to blame for the onslaught of crappy movies. We’ve seen local movies at their worst; it’s time to see them at their best.

Please feel free to email your movie reviews to michaelsylim@gmail.com.

Tweet Scoop: MMFF's Official Statement Regarding Ticket Swapping Incidents

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Repost: Mar Roxas Spends Christmas in Nona-hit Mindoro

CHRISTMAS EVE MASS. Mar Roxas and his wife, Korina Sanchez, attend Misa de Aguinaldo in Pinamalayan, Oriental Mindoro. 
Image courtesy of Dindo Melaya

Source: www.rappler.com

It was an unusual Christmas celebration for the standard-bearer of the ruling Liberal Party (LP), who flew to disaster-hit Oriental Mindoro on December 24, Thursday.

Dindo Melaya, a local of Pinamalayan town, told Rappler that Roxas visited some areas devastated by the Typhoon Nona (Melor), had dinner with some evacuees at the municipal gymnasium, before joining Misa de Aguinaldo nearby.

Roxas was joined by his wife, broadcaster Korina Sanchez and son, Paolo.

The LP standard-bearer visits some areas affected by the typhoon. 
Photo from the Pinamalayan Municipal Police Station Facebook page

Photo from the Pinamalayan Municipal Police Station Facebook page

Before attending mass, Roxas and his wife joined typhoon victims at the town gymnasium. 
Photo from the Pinamalayan Municipal Police Station Facebook page

CHRISTMAS EVE MASS. Roxas and his wife are also joined by the Umalis of Oriental Mindoro. Photo courtesy of Dindo Melaya

Pinamalayan is where Nona made landfall more than a week ago. Roughly 50% of homes in the town were damaged by Nona, Melaya told Rappler. His own home wasn’t spared from Nona’s wrath.

Photo courtesy of Dindo Melaya

Roxas’ visit comes a day after President Benigno Aquino III dropped by the town to check on the situation in the province – a visit, Melaya said, that left some typhoon evacuees disappointed because they were unable to go near the President.

After attending mass and taking photos with mass-goers, Roxas left for Calapan with LP allies Oriental Mindoro Governor Alfonso Umali, Jr. and Oriental Mindoro 2nd district Representative Reynaldo Umali.

Photo courtesy of Dhon Calda

Roxas, who usually spends the Christmas break with relatives overseas, hinted at the Mindoro trip in a chance interview with reporters earlier this week.

“Malalaman na lang ninyo (You’ll find out), but I intend to be with our people on Christmas,” said Roxas when asked whether he would work or rest during the Christmas break.

The LP standard-bearer avoided talking about politics in recent trips out-of-town, particularly in Bulacan where he joined local politicians in relief efforts.

Just this week, at least 3 polling firms released the results of their presidential preference surveys. The different polls saw Roxas either take a dip or enjoy incremental increases in his numbers. (READ: Roxas suffers first survey dip post-endorsement)

In separate statements, Roxas and spokespersons of the LP-led “Daang Matuwid” coalition downplayed the survey results, saying the “most important survey” would be the one held on election day on May 9, 2016.

Roxas ranks either 3rd or 4th in recent surveys, which saw presidential aspirant Vice President Jejomar Binay bounce back after a still-to-be-resolved corruption scandal.

Metro Manila Film Festival 2015 Gross Earnings (as of Dec. 25, 6pm)

Image courtesy of The Philippines Star

Insta Scoop: 'Honor Thy Father' Not Pulled out of Cinemas over MMFF Disqualification for Best Picture Award Issue


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Insta Scoop: Mother Lily Shares Practice of Cinemas for Showing MMFF Movies


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FB Scoop: Mayor Duterte's Inclusive Christmas Message



Insta Scoop: Alden Richards Spends Vacation with Family



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Insta Scoop: Kim Chiu Opens Gift from Xian Lim

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Insta Scoop: LizQuen Enjoying the Sunset in Batangas

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Celebrity Sans Make-up: Pia Wurtzbach

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