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2011 is the most fruitful year in Philippine Cinema history as 3 films produced within the year (all from Star Cinema) landed in the top 3 of the highest grossing Filipino films of all time. [80] Wenn Deramas' The Unkabogable Praybeyt Benjamin grossed ₱331.6 million in box office and became the highest grossing local film in the Philippines. [81]
Viva Films / Cineko Productions / Rein Entertainment Philip King (director); Paulo Avelino, Kylie Verzosa [21] G! L.U. ALV Films / Rein Entertainment / Benchingko Films Philip King (director); David Licauco, Kiko Estrada, Teejay Marquez, Derrick Monasterio, Enzo Pineda, Ruru Madrid [22] 26: Red Flag: Vivamax
2nd ASEAN-Japan TV Festival 2017 (September 2017) 50th Anniversary of Leyte Landing (1994) The 60th Anniversary of Korean-Philippine Diplomatic Relations Friendship Festival (2009) Aliw Awards (1994–2009; 2012) Anak TV Seal Awards (January 12, 2014) Ang Kwentong PTV: 50th Anniversary Special (June 19, 2024)
The Big Story (2016–present; Bloomberg TV Philippines/One News, 2019; TV5, 2024–present; One PH) The DPI Mid-Day Report (1978; PTV) The Exchange (2020–2024; CNN Philippines) The Final Report (1997–1998; PTV) The Final Word with Rico Hizon (2020–2024; CNN Philippines) The Hour Updates (1989–1994; RPN) The News with Uncle Bob (1961 ...
It is organized by the Film Development Council of the Philippines. Similar to the Metro Manila Film Festival, only shortlisted films will be shown in cinemas except in select 3D cinemas, VIP cinemas (in an opt-in/opt-out basis by developer) and IMAX theaters. The movies are classified into 3 categories.
Saga Film Studios is a new entity headed by Monteverde for the purpose of bringing top quality, event movies to the Philippines. On its advisory board sits veteran Christian Halsey Solomon.
Logo used from July 16, 2012, to July 31, 2021. The channel was launched as Viva Cinema on February 1, 2009, the day Cignal Digital TV also began operation. The channel's programming line-up consisted of previous teleseries produced by Viva Television, Filipino films and Hollywood films, as well as televised interviews related to upcoming domestic and international films.
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 ...