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| producer = [[Narcisa de León]]
| producer = [[Narcisa de León]]
| writer = [[Carlos Vander Tolosa]]
| writer = [[Carlos Vander Tolosa]]
| starring = [[Ely Ramos]]<br>[[Fernando Poe (actor)|Fernando Poe]]<br>[[Mila Del Sol]]<br>[[Mona Lisa (actress)|Fleur de Lis]]
| starring = [[Ely Ramos]]<br>[[Fernando Poe (actor)|Fernando Poe]]<br>[[Mila del Sol]]<br>[[Mona Lisa (actress)|Fleur de Lis]]
| music = [[Juan Silos Jr.]]<br>[[Ariston Avelino]]
| music = [[Juan Silos Jr.]]<br>[[Ariston Avelino]]
| cinematography = [[Benigio Young]]
| cinematography = [[Benigio Young]]
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| gross =
| gross =
}}
}}
'''''Giliw Ko''''' ([[Filipino language|Filipino]] for "my love"<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Matilac |first=Rosalie |date=1994 |title=Giliw Ko |url=https://epa.culturalcenter.gov.ph/4/24/1169/ |url-access=subscription |website=Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art |publisher=[[Cultural Center of the Philippines]]}}</ref>) is a 1939 [[Cinema of the Philippines|Filipino]] [[Musical film|musical]] [[romance film]]. The first production of [[LVN Pictures]], it established the production company's tradition of musical extravaganzas. Directed and written by Carlos Vander Tolosa, it stars [[Ely Ramos]], [[Fernando Poe (actor)|Fernando Poe]], [[Ely Ramos]], [[Mila Del Sol]], and [[Mona Lisa (actress)|Fleur de Lis]].<ref name=":0" />
'''''Giliw Ko''''' ([[Filipino language|Filipino]] for "my love"<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Matilac |first=Rosalie |date=1994 |title=Giliw Ko |url=https://epa.culturalcenter.gov.ph/4/24/1169/ |url-access=subscription |website=Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art |publisher=[[Cultural Center of the Philippines]]}}</ref>) is a 1939 [[Cinema of the Philippines|Filipino]] [[Musical film|musical]] [[romance film]]. The first production of [[LVN Pictures]], it established the production company's tradition of musical extravaganzas. Directed and written by Carlos Vander Tolosa, it stars [[Ely Ramos]], [[Fernando Poe (actor)|Fernando Poe]], [[Ely Ramos]], [[Mila del Sol]], and [[Mona Lisa (actress)|Fleur de Lis]].<ref name=":0" />


==Plot==
==Plot==

Revision as of 11:49, 27 May 2023

Giliw Ko
Directed byCarlos Vander Tolosa
Written byCarlos Vander Tolosa
Produced byNarcisa de León
StarringEly Ramos
Fernando Poe
Mila del Sol
Fleur de Lis
CinematographyBenigio Young
Edited byMario Rosales
Music byJuan Silos Jr.
Ariston Avelino
Color processBlack and white
Production
company
Carlos Vander Tolosa Production
Distributed byLVN Pictures
Release date
  • July 29, 1939 (1939-07-29)
Running time
91 minutes
CountryPhilippines
LanguagesFilipino
Tagalog

Giliw Ko (Filipino for "my love"[1]) is a 1939 Filipino musical romance film. The first production of LVN Pictures, it established the production company's tradition of musical extravaganzas. Directed and written by Carlos Vander Tolosa, it stars Ely Ramos, Fernando Poe, Ely Ramos, Mila del Sol, and Fleur de Lis.[1]

Plot

Guia (Mila del Sol) is a provincial girl who becomes infatuated with images of Hollywood and the attention lavished on her by Antonio (Ely Ramos), the son of the wealthy landlord. Antonio is the bandleader of a radio orchestra; he convinces Guia to come to Manila with him and sing American songs on the radio. In Manila, Guia eventually becomes disillusioned, defines Antonio by singing in Tagalog, and returns back to the province and into the arms of her childhood sweetheart, Jose (Fernando Poe Sr.).

Cast

  • Ely Ramos as Antonio Lopez
  • Fernando Poe as Jose
  • Mila del Sol as Guia
  • Fleur de Lis as Rosie
  • Ben Rubio as Mang Takio
  • Precioso Palma as Don Alvaro
  • Cecilia Joaquin as Mang Juan
  • Viva Ortega as Doña Lucia
  • Nieves Obieta as Atang
  • SSS Trio as Themselves

Production

Several scenes of the film were shot at the mansion of Narcisa de Leon, the producer and matriarch of LVN Pictures.[2]

Release

The film was released on July 29, 1939 at the Manila Metropolitan Theater. President Manuel L. Quezon was in attendance.[3]

Restoration

In 1998, for the Philippines's centennial, the Australian government, through its National Film and Sound Archive, gifted the country with a restored copy of Giliw Ko.[4] In 2022, ABS-CBN Film Restoration Project announced it was undergoing a new scan of the film print.[5]


See also

References

  1. ^ a b Matilac, Rosalie (1994). "Giliw Ko". Cultural Center of the Philippines Encyclopedia of Philippine Art. Cultural Center of the Philippines.
  2. ^ De Leon 2022, p. 61.
  3. ^ n.a. (May 16, 2018). "Inside The Manila Metropolitan Theatre Restoration". Tatler Asia. Archived from the original on March 20, 2023.
  4. ^ Forbes 2016, p. 171.
  5. ^ Soliman, Michelle Anne (February 1, 2022). "How ABS-CBN continues to save PHL film heritage". BusinessWorld.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Bibliography