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Crying Ladies | |
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Directed by | Mark Meily |
Written by |
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Screenplay by | Mark Meily |
Based on | Bayad Luha by Mark Meily |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Lee Meily |
Edited by | Danny Añonuevo |
Music by | Vincent Abenojar De Jesus |
Production company | |
Distributed by |
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Release dates |
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Running time | 111 minutes |
Country | Philippines |
Languages | |
Box office | ₱70 million[1] |
Crying Ladies is a 2003 Filipino comedy-drama film directed by Mark Meily based on his Palanca-winning screenplay Bayad Luha.[2] The film stars Sharon Cuneta as Stella, Hilda Koronel as Aling Doray, and Angel Aquino as Choleng, who are hired as professional funeral mourners by a wealthy Chinese-Filipino family in Manila's Chinatown, while they deal with their personal problems.
The film was released on December 25, 2003, in the Philippines as an entry to the 2003 Metro Manila Film Festival where it won five major awards including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor for Quizon, Best Supporting Actress for Koronel, and Best Child Performer for Pacheco. It was the Philippines' submission to the 77th Academy Awards for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.[3]
After the death of his father, Wilson is tasked by his wealthy Chinese-Filipino family to look for professional funeral mourners who will participate in the funeral rites. Despite the waning popularity of professional mourners, his family insists on hiring them so that his father can have a traditional Chinese funeral.
While searching in Manila's Chinatown, he meets Stella, a cash-strapped mother who has been recently released after serving time for fraud. Despite her initial apprehensions and realization that Wilson's father was responsible for her imprisonment, she agrees to be a funeral mourner after accepting a 500-peso advanced payment from Wilson. Stella tags two of her friends, Aling Doray, a former B-star actress who waxes nostalgic about her former acting career under the stage name Rhoda Rivera, and Choleng, a pious woman who vows to avoid sinning after having repeated affairs with her friend's husband Ipe.
During their stint as professional mourners, the three bond and talk about their experiences, struggles, and dreams in life. Stella is sad because of the impending departure of her young son Bong, who will be moving to Cagayan de Oro, along with her former husband Guido and his new wife Cecile. She wants to have a decent and stable job so she can reclaim custody and reunite with her son. Doray frequently reminisces about her acting career, particularly as an extra in Darna and the Giants. Choleng is trying to resist Ipe's advances and end their affair and make up for it by doing more religious and charity works.
After the burial of his father, Wilson, who had a tumultuous relationship with his father, forgives him for not being a good father and starts appreciating the good things he has done. He calls Stella to inform her that a Japanese promotion company is hiring entertainers. Stella immediately applies and gets the job, where she becomes a successful karaoke actress. Doray gets an offer to reprise her role as an extra in a sequel of Darna and the Giants. Choleng finally ends her affair with Ipe and is now a marriage counselor in her parish.
Crying Ladies was based on Bayad Luha, a screenplay written by Meily in 2000 as part of his thesis for a screenwriting workshop by Filipino scriptwriter Armando Lao.[4][5] He later entered it into the Don Carlos Palanca Awards in 2001 where it won the Third Prize in Dulaang Pampelikula (Filipino Division). Unitel Pictures producer Tony Gloria read the screenplay and described it as "unput-downable." Gloria offered the lead role to Cuneta, due to their previous collaborations in Dear Heart, P.S. I Love You, and Forgive and Forget. The role of Aling Doray was initially offered to Nida Blanca before she was murdered. As such, the role had to be re-written for Hilda Koronel.[2]
Crying Ladies is the first Filipino film that makes extensive use of MILO Motion Control System and also the first Filipino film to be shot on the latest Kodak Eastman 2 film stock. It is the second Filipino movie to be locally recorded and mixed in Dolby SRD 5.1 technology.[4]
Crying Ladies received mixed to positive reviews from critics. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 92% based on 13 reviews.[6] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 54% based on reviews from 5 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[7]
The story was praised by several critics. A.O. Scott of New York Times wrote, "Its most winning attribute is a kind of sloppy, unassuming friendliness, a likability aptly reflected in its characters."[8] Kevin Thomas of Los Angeles Times described the film as "An endearing comedy that deftly blends sentiment and grit and features a clutch of top Filipino stars."[9] Eddie Cockrell of Variety praised Meily's direction and the cast's performance: “Crying Ladies moves smartly and evenly under the direction of debut helmer Mark Meily. Perfs sparkle, with each thesp comfortable navigating between broad comedy and legitimate pathos."[10]
The film received some negative reviews. Mark Holcomb of Village Voice criticized the editing, but still praised the film, particularly Cuneta's performance: "Cuneta delivers an engaging, surprisingly coarse performance, considering her onetime Philippines-sweetheart status, and the subtle revelations concerning ritual and loss in Meily’s story serve her well. More judicious editing was surely called for, but Crying Ladies succeeds as first-rate melodrama."[11] V.A. Musetto, writing for New York Post, also criticized the film: "There aren't many surprises as the story unfolds in soap-opera fashion, with a happy ending for all concerned."[9]
Crying Ladies: Official Soundtrack | |
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Soundtrack album by | |
Released | December 25, 2003 |
Genre | Pop/rock, R&B, OPM |
Label | Unitel |
Crying Ladies was accompanied with a soundtrack during its theatrical release for the promotion of the album. The album contains pop/rock, R&B and OPM songs from various artists such as Kuh Ledesma, South Border and Parokya ni Edgar.[12] It's carrier single Rainbow became a radio smash hit in 2004.
No. | Title | Artist | Length |
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1. | "Rainbow" | South Border | |
2. | "Idlip" | Barbie's Cradle | |
3. | "Inner Strength (Love & Faith)" | Aliya Parcs | |
4. | "Magbabago" | Parliament Syndicate | |
5. | "My Imagination" | All-Star | |
6. | "Stay" | Boom Dayupay and Angel Jones of Kulay | |
7. | "With You Around" | Art Strong | |
8. | "Para Sa Iyo" | Serendipity | |
9. | "Goodbye" | 604 | |
10. | "Father" | Kuh Ledesma | |
11. | "Madapaka" | Parokya ni Edgar |
Year | Award-Giving Body | Category | Recipient | Result |
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2003 | Metro Manila Film Festival[13] | Best Picture | Crying Ladies | Won |
Best Director | Mark Meily | Won | ||
Best Actor | Eric Quizon | Won | ||
Best Supporting Actress | Hilda Koronel | Won | ||
Best Child Performer | Julio Pacheco | Won | ||
2004 | FAMAS Awards | Best Actor | Eric Quizon | Nominated |
Best Actress | Sharon Cuneta | Nominated | ||
Best Supporting Actress | Hilda Koronel | Nominated | ||
Best Director | Mark Meily | Nominated | ||
Best Screenplay | Nominated | |||
Gawad Urian Awards | Best Picture | Crying Ladies | Nominated | |
Best Director | Mark Meily | Nominated | ||
Best Supporting Actor | Eric Quizon | Nominated | ||
Julio Pacheco | Nominated | |||
Best Supporting Actress | Hilda Koronel | Nominated | ||
Sherry Lara | Nominated | |||
Best Screenplay | Mark Meily | Nominated | ||
Best Editing | Danny Añonuevo | Nominated | ||
Best Cinematography | Lee Meily | Won | ||
Best Production Design | Norman Regalado | Nominated | ||
Best Music | Vincent De Jesus | Nominated | ||
Best Sound | Danny Añonuevo | Nominated | ||
FAP Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Eric Quizon | Nominated | |
Kerala International Film Festival | NETPAC Award | Mark Meily | Won | |
Golden Crow Pheasant | Nominated | |||
Silver Crow Pheasant | Won |