Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The National Film Archives of the Philippines houses the history of Philippine Cinema and protects the country's cultural legacy in film through the preservation, retrieval, and restoration of film negatives, prints and other film related material and promotes these to provide a wider appreciation of the cinema history by making them available ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Excluded in this list are works with a foreign cast (such as Ignacio de Loyola) which had primarily Spanish actors but was produced only by a Philippine-based studio, works which were adaptations of foreign media, and media produced solely by foreign production companies that are set in the Philippines and despite including Filipinos in its ...
Philippine New Wave (known as Filipino New Wave or Contemporary Philippine Cinema) is a filmmaking term that has been popularly associated with the resurgence of independent, digital and experimental films in the Philippines began in the 21st century, and merged into a recent filmmaking period known as the Third Golden Age of Philippine cinema ...
Brocka was born in Pilar, Sorsogon. [9] He grew up and lived in San Jose, Nueva Ecija [10] [11] and graduated from Nueva Ecija High School in 1956. [12] He attended the University of the Philippines and began working in theatre, acting and directing plays where his career in cinema and television followed suit. [13]
Order of National Artists of the Philippines Lamberto Vera Avellana NA February 12, 1915 – April 25, 1991) was a prominent Filipino film and stage director . Despite considerable budgetary limitations that hampered the post-war Filipino film industry, Avellana's films such as Anak Dalita and Badjao attained international acclaim.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Vaudeville in the Philippines, more commonly referred in the Filipino vernacular as bodabil, was a popular genre of entertainment in the Philippines from the 1910s until the mid-1960s. For decades, it competed with film, radio and television as the dominant form of Filipino mass entertainment.