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In 1903, José Jiménez, a stage backdrop painter, set up the first Filipino-owned movie theater, the Cinematograpo Rizal in Azcarraga Street (now C.M. Recto Ave.), in front of the Tutuban Railway Station. [14] In the same year, a movie market was formally created in the country along with the arrival of silent movies and American colonialism. [11]
At present, ABS-CBN Film Archives holds about 2,400 Filipino films from Star Cinema, LVN Pictures, Regal Films, VIVA Films, Seiko Films, Cinema Artists, Sampaguita Pictures, OctoArts Films, Imus Productions, RVQ Productions, Cine Suerte, NV Productions along with the cinema libraries of Dolphy, Nora Aunor, Fernando Poe Jr., Rudy Fernandez ...
This is Filipino Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (FAMAS) first Best Picture in 1952. Written by Amado Yasona and serialized in Mabuhay Komiks in 1950. The movie was supposed to be the sole entry of Premiere Productions to the Famas derby but the studio was gripped with labor problems which had reached the courts.
The goal of the project is to digitally restore and remaster select Filipino films from the archives of ABS-CBN. Since the beginning of the project in 2011, the project has successfully digitized, restored, and remastered over one hundred Filipino films into a 1080p or 2K Digital Cinema Package format with a maximum resolution of 2048x1080 ...
Title Director Cast Genre Notes 1970: Mardy: Consuelo P. Osorio: Eddie Peregrina, Vilma Santos, Esperanza Fabon, Bebong Osorio: Action: Let's Do It: The Las Vegas Way: Lauro Pacheco ...
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The Woman Who Left (Filipino: Ang Babaeng Humayo) is a 2016 Philippine drama film written, produced, edited, and directed by Lav Diaz.Filmed entirely in black-and-white, it was selected to compete in the main competition section at the 73rd Venice International Film Festival where it won the Golden Lion.
First Filipino movie with colored sequences: Ibong Adarna – 1941 [138] First Filipino movie in full-color: Prinsipe Amante – 1951 [139] first Filipino movie to be acclaimed in an international film festival: [140] Genghis Khan – showed on the Venice Film Festival in 1952 [141] First Filipino full-length animation film: Adarna – 1997 [142]