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This is an incomplete list of Filipino full-length films, both mainstream and independently produced, released in theaters, cinemas, and streaming services in 2024. Some films are in production but do not have definite release dates.
119 minutes. Country. Philippines. Language. Filipino. Box office. ₱543 million[ 1] Miracle in Cell No. 7 is a 2019 Filipino drama film directed by Nuel Crisostomo Naval and starring Aga Muhlach, Xia Vigor and Bela Padilla. The film is based on the 2013 South Korean film of the same name directed by Lee Hwan-kyung.
Rewind. (2023 film) Rewind is a 2023 Philippine science fiction romantic drama film directed by Mae Cruz-Alviar from a story and screenplay written by Enrico C. Santos, with Joel Mercado co-written the latter. It stars Dingdong Dantes as a man who is given a chance to travel back in time to save his wife (played by Dantes' real-life wife Marian ...
Bicolano. Firefly is a 2023 Philippine fantasy film written by Angeli Atienza and directed by Zig Dulay. The film stars Alessandra De Rossi and Euwenn Mikaell in his theatrical debut. It was one of the entries in the 2023 Metro Manila Film Festival, where it won as Best Picture.
Filipino. Paglaki Ko, Gusto Kong Maging Pornstar ( transl. When I Grow Up, I Want to be a Pornstar) is a 2021 Philippine comedy drama film starring Alma Moreno, Rosanna Roces, Ara Mina and Maui Taylor. The film was written and directed by Darryl Yap [1] and edited by Vincent Asis. It premiered on January 29, 2021, through Vivamax.
This is an incomplete list of Filipino full-length films, both mainstream and independently produced, released in theaters and cinemas in 2022. Some films are in production but do not have definite release dates. For extended information about the effects of the coronavirus pandemic on film industry, see Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on cinema.
This is the list of feature-length theatrical films produced and released by the Filipino motion picture company Star Cinema since its foundation in 1993. This film-related list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items .
—JC Nigado, writing for the Manila Standard in July 1987 By the time the People Power Revolution deposed Ferdinand Marcos from the presidency, most Filipino films were mass-produced with quality sacrificed for commercial success. Filmmaker Ishmael Bernal admitted in 1993 that his growing inactivity in filmmaking was because the national economy "went kamikaze since '86. Movie producers have ...