Gagamboy

2004
Gagamboy
5.6| 1h40m| en| More Info
Released: 29 December 2004 Released
Producted By: MAQ Productions
Country: Philippines
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

An accident at a pharmaceutical lab turns the mild-mannered and unassuming Junie, an ice cream vendor, into a superhero. Junie finds out that being strong and admired can also have its downside.

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Reviews

luke32jp_1999 Saw this film whilst on a trip to Hong Kong last year and happened to catch it at the ongoing HK Intl Film Festival. Saw the long lines of mostly HK teenagers. I felt I may be out of place but that thought lasted only a few minutes into the movie when I started laughing together with the crowd enjoying this funny film which is a third world take on Spiderman, slapstick style. It has great effects but obviously not meant to impress but enough for you to appreciate the efforts of the director who may be working on a tight budget. The movie takes place in a slum area which could be typical in a poor country like the Philippines (where this film is from). Some of the scenes were lost on me though perhaps could be too local in flavor for me to understand but I believe could be politically tinted jokes. The lead actor has great comedic timing, the production design is fantastic, and the movie translates well for both children and adults. Not sure if this available on DVD. Highly recommended.
foutiroir Of course, with 250'000$ budget, it's impossible to have the spectacular result of Spider-Man. Yet, this movie is better than the American original. Full of humor (some scenes could have been done by the Monty Pythons!), the movie offers us also an interesting look on poverty and politics in Philippines. The colors (a lot in this movie) remember the Philippines comics, and make the townships look like in soap operas. The 2nd degree - always present - make this movie interesting for both adults and kids. Actors are good in this comedy, doing enough to make us laugh and passing emotions through the screen. Well done! Thanks Matti & Co!
haimoff I had a chance to view this film during the NIFFF 2004 (Neuchatel International Fantasy Film Festival)in Switzerland. This is director Erik Matti's second film and was rather a flop in his country, as it was considered a children film. In Europe a far more mature public is discovering this very amusing low-budget parody. During the festival this film was always sold out and everybody love it ! It's the story of Junie an ice-cream salesman, who swallows a spider and transforms into Gagamboy (what means "Spiderboy"). He has to defend the good and fight against evil (Cockroachman) and tries to gain the heart of lovely Liana. The budget was very low, but compensated with lots of humor and very ironic playing actors. The film takes itself never serious and under this point of view makes a lot of fun. Not like so many US-productions of Marvel-comics this movie has something very important: soul ! 4 out of 5 *
ourchairweb When the hero wears a mask that looks more like a rejected Ninja Turtle design from Jim Henson's Creature Shop, and the villain is clad in enough rubber latex and foam to make Ultraman and all his heroic sentai brethren quiver in fear, you absolutely cannot go wrong with Gagamboy.And let me stress that with its enthusiastic influences from Sergio Leone spaghetti westerns and triumphant brass numbers that echo snizbits from the 60s Spider-Man theme song, the soundtrack to Gagamboy is definitely the one to get.It's inevitable to make comparisons between Spider-Man and Gagamboy, but that's like comparing Ping Lacson and Daryl F. Gates. The similarities are superficial at best, and any correlation is a sign of complete misunderstanding. Unlike most other Pinoy superheroes, Gagamboy is a film with an identity and dichotomy all its own, and stands out as one of the none rip-offs.Gagamboy is not about power and responsibility, nor is it about father figures. And most of all, Gagamboy is not about an isolated geek's transformation into a Friendly Neighborhood hero who "swings with it". Rather, it's about a boy who discovers that having powers and a secret identity doesn't make you any more substantial than the fabric that makes your costume and how your alter ego can never be more than the person who inhabits it. And most of all, it's about how escaping your "self" is not all it's cracked up to be.