Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe film revolves around two couples who find themselves in conflict with the foreign commercial giants that control the Philippine economy, the Japanese and the Chinese.The film revolves around two couples who find themselves in conflict with the foreign commercial giants that control the Philippine economy, the Japanese and the Chinese.The film revolves around two couples who find themselves in conflict with the foreign commercial giants that control the Philippine economy, the Japanese and the Chinese.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 7 premios ganados y 10 nominaciones en total
Charo Santos-Concio
- Melanie
- (as Charo Santos)
Boboy Garrovillo
- Onota
- (as Boboy Garovillo)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Available at FDCP Streaming Website with hardcoded English subtitles with other Filipino Classics.
This was a wacky comedy about two couples who got involved between two race gangs that shockingly piqued its way into some smartly conveyed messaging that never truly felt politically incorrect for the most part. This because , it still has that Chinese can't say their 'R' jokes midway.
But primarily, It was in the end about the drug trade - AND *surprise* the fight for better product Quality between the Japanese and Chinese Gang Lord. Who is better? They fight in a broadway-esque musical about spreading the bread about it. Also, I am not the only one here that the Visayan Catholic father has Cocaine ticks AND that is a plot beat RIGHT?
It is a bit all over the place.
I felt that it worked 2/3 of the way. The first third AND the last third was amazing. The second third is a hit or miss. I felt that the jokes also (especially the Chinese Bath section and that Promote guy) truly hits uncomfortable in a boring way. I am huge FAN of Waters - AND I would have loved if they lay it BARE UNAFRAID and with INFINITE conviction but they never did in that section. It WAS a SLOG.
But when it succeeds, its goes truly hard. I really love how the joke in this is how confident the Japanese guy of his country's product AND how good it is AND the joke for the Chinese Ganglord is that she steals designs AND make it easy to buy. It never goes to places you'd think it go AND it even ups the ante to the famous musical sequence about the bread of their works.
Recommended. This definitely has its moments BUT I felt like there are true problems in this film. Good Comedy with some Date Problematic Jokes.
This was a wacky comedy about two couples who got involved between two race gangs that shockingly piqued its way into some smartly conveyed messaging that never truly felt politically incorrect for the most part. This because , it still has that Chinese can't say their 'R' jokes midway.
But primarily, It was in the end about the drug trade - AND *surprise* the fight for better product Quality between the Japanese and Chinese Gang Lord. Who is better? They fight in a broadway-esque musical about spreading the bread about it. Also, I am not the only one here that the Visayan Catholic father has Cocaine ticks AND that is a plot beat RIGHT?
It is a bit all over the place.
I felt that it worked 2/3 of the way. The first third AND the last third was amazing. The second third is a hit or miss. I felt that the jokes also (especially the Chinese Bath section and that Promote guy) truly hits uncomfortable in a boring way. I am huge FAN of Waters - AND I would have loved if they lay it BARE UNAFRAID and with INFINITE conviction but they never did in that section. It WAS a SLOG.
But when it succeeds, its goes truly hard. I really love how the joke in this is how confident the Japanese guy of his country's product AND how good it is AND the joke for the Chinese Ganglord is that she steals designs AND make it easy to buy. It never goes to places you'd think it go AND it even ups the ante to the famous musical sequence about the bread of their works.
Recommended. This definitely has its moments BUT I felt like there are true problems in this film. Good Comedy with some Date Problematic Jokes.
Even Mike de Leon has a sense of humor. This film not only pokes fun at commercial imperialism, but also at the little dictators who control the Philippine economy - the Chinese movie producers and the Catholic church. George Javier stands out as the idol of the imperialist colonizers. He still maintains his bumbling persona, in an unusually somber manner. The animation is put to good use (watch the battle of the subtitles between the Japanese and the Chinese!) A winner all the way!
Laugh out loud, hilarious absurd comedy. The entire audience was in stitches.
Though (or, through) bearing all the stereotypical trademarks of several Filipino film genres, Mike De Leon's Kakabakaba Ka Ba? (1980) might be the most original Filipino film of all time, certainly the most original of its era. Still under Martial Law, progressive Filipino filmmakers had to go the extra creative mile to sidestep censorship, which they had done so with the allegorical, social-realist melodrama. Stepping away from the form that he and his accomplished peers (Lino Brocka, Ishmael Bernal) had become known for, De Leon mixes the campiest elements of Filipino musical, comedy, crime and action flicks, "bomba" films and even science fiction into an amusing satire that stands apart from his darker films like Batch '81 and Kisapmata.
It's an unlikely vehicle for a political allegory about imperialist domination of the Philippines and the Catholic church's complicit role. It works because it's as scathing as it is silly, apparent from the half-serious disclaimers opening the film stating that it is purely fictional (of course it is - which, then, suggests that maybe it isn't).
Interesting watching Filipinos turn the table, stereotyping and mocking other nationalities (and ourselves) for once. A bumbling Japanese Yakuza fails on three separate occasions to smuggle contraband past Philippine customs at the airport. On his latest attempt - a cassette tape laced with opium - he slips the booty into Christopher De Leon's jacket, who then slides through customs unchecked. Things get interesting for De Leon and his three buddies (Charo Santos, Jay Ilagan and Sandy Andolong) as they discover they are being spied on and followed. Everyone from the Yakuza, the Chinese mafia and even the Catholic church are all trying to get their hands on the tape. The conspiracy? A plot to use opium, distributed through communion hosts during mass, to turn the FIlipino people into docile subjects under foreign control (isn't this already happening, but without the drugs?).
The funny title is colloquially untranslatable into English, though its been loosely translated as Does Your Heart Beat Faster? or Are You Nervous? Much of the humor, I suspect, is also untranslatable in all its glorious cornball mannerisms and wit. Every outrageous scene, whether a flock of nuns breaking into song and dance (more than a decade before Sister Act) or the climactic Broadway-inspired number, is well-timed, the satire never losing its aim. Plus, the soundtrack goes hard (is there an official Original Soundtrack release for this film? somebody hook me up!).
As much as we love to sing and dance, and as much as we're struggling to get free, you'd think there would be stacks upon stacks of quality Filipino films that reflect both realities. Nope. There are many escapist musicals and comedies and many political dramas, but Kakabakaba Ka Ba? is the only one of its kind - a political musical satire - which, at first glance is a surprise knowing that it's a Mike De Leon film. Then again, knowing De Leon's cynicism and reputation as the "dark genius" of Philippine cinema, perhaps only he could've pulled it off.
It's an unlikely vehicle for a political allegory about imperialist domination of the Philippines and the Catholic church's complicit role. It works because it's as scathing as it is silly, apparent from the half-serious disclaimers opening the film stating that it is purely fictional (of course it is - which, then, suggests that maybe it isn't).
Interesting watching Filipinos turn the table, stereotyping and mocking other nationalities (and ourselves) for once. A bumbling Japanese Yakuza fails on three separate occasions to smuggle contraband past Philippine customs at the airport. On his latest attempt - a cassette tape laced with opium - he slips the booty into Christopher De Leon's jacket, who then slides through customs unchecked. Things get interesting for De Leon and his three buddies (Charo Santos, Jay Ilagan and Sandy Andolong) as they discover they are being spied on and followed. Everyone from the Yakuza, the Chinese mafia and even the Catholic church are all trying to get their hands on the tape. The conspiracy? A plot to use opium, distributed through communion hosts during mass, to turn the FIlipino people into docile subjects under foreign control (isn't this already happening, but without the drugs?).
The funny title is colloquially untranslatable into English, though its been loosely translated as Does Your Heart Beat Faster? or Are You Nervous? Much of the humor, I suspect, is also untranslatable in all its glorious cornball mannerisms and wit. Every outrageous scene, whether a flock of nuns breaking into song and dance (more than a decade before Sister Act) or the climactic Broadway-inspired number, is well-timed, the satire never losing its aim. Plus, the soundtrack goes hard (is there an official Original Soundtrack release for this film? somebody hook me up!).
As much as we love to sing and dance, and as much as we're struggling to get free, you'd think there would be stacks upon stacks of quality Filipino films that reflect both realities. Nope. There are many escapist musicals and comedies and many political dramas, but Kakabakaba Ka Ba? is the only one of its kind - a political musical satire - which, at first glance is a surprise knowing that it's a Mike De Leon film. Then again, knowing De Leon's cynicism and reputation as the "dark genius" of Philippine cinema, perhaps only he could've pulled it off.
¿Sabías que…?
- ConexionesReferenced in I Do Bidoo Bidoo: Heto nApo sila! (2012)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Will Your Heart Beat Faster?
- Locaciones de filmación
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- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 44 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
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By what name was Kakabakaba ka ba? (1980) officially released in India in English?
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