Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
first feature-length comedy film and first Filipino comic trio La Mujer Filipina: Malayan Movies: Produced by José Nepumuceno: 1928: Ang Lumang Simbahan: José Nepumuceno: Juanita Angeles, Gregorio Fernandez, Naty Fernandez, Sofia Lotta, Aniceto Robledo, Mary Walter: Malayan Movies: Drama
Films before the 2010s; Pre-1940 1940s 1950s 1960s ... Filipino film at the Internet Movie Database ... This film-related list is incomplete; ...
This was the first movie of the storied film production company. She made twelve other films for LVN during this period, including Hali (1940), an early example of the Sarong genre, and Sawing Gantimpala (1940), which was based on a song written for del Sol by First Lady Aurora Quezon .
In 1929, the Syncopation, the first American sound film, was shown in Radio theater in Plaza Santa Cruz in Manila inciting a competition on who could make the first talkie among local producers. On December 8, 1932, a film in Tagalog entitled Ang Aswang (The Aswang), a monster movie inspired by Philippine folklore, was promoted as the first ...
The film was officially recognized as the first Filipino-produced and directed film by the Philippine government in the 2018 Proclamation No. 622. The Proclamation declared September 12, 2019, to September 11, 2020, the centennial year of Philippine cinema. The dates were chosen as Dalagang Bukid would celebrate its centennial that year. [13]
first movie of Premiere Productions this certified box-office hit is the first Filipino movie to run for 30 days in the Philippines, earning P225,000 (a huge amount at that time). Guerilyera: Octavio Silos: Carmen Rosales, Tita Duran, Celso Baltazar, Oscar Moreno, Maria Cristina: Sampaguita Pictures: Drama: Victory Joe: Manuel Silos
0–9. List of Philippine films before 1940; List of Philippine films of the 1930s; List of Philippine films of the 1940s; List of Philippine films of the 1950s
LVN Pictures was formed by the De Leon ["L"], Villongco ["V"], and Navoa ["N"] families before the onset of World War II in 1938. [1] At that time, the American-occupied Philippines was a ready market for American films, which further influenced various filmmakers like Jose Nepomuceno (the Father of Philippine Movies) to set up various film production companies to produce Tagalog movies.