La vida de José Rizal explained

La vida de Jose Rizal
Director:Edward Gross
Producer:Harry Brown
Starring:Honorio Lopez
Titay Molina
Chananay
Cinematography:Charles Martin
Distributor:Rizalina Photoplay Company
Country:Philippines

La vida de José Rizal (The life of Jose Rizal), released in 1912, was the first feature film produced in the Philippines. It was however not the first film released in the country—a rival film, El fusilamiento de Dr. José Rizal was released on August 23, one day earlier. La Vida is a silent film that depicts the life of José Rizal, the country's national hero, from his birth to his execution in Luneta.[1]

Americans Harry Brown (producer), Charles Martin (cinematographer), and Edward Gross (scenery), founded the Rizalina Photoplay Company in 1912 to produce the film, which was adapted from a 1905 stage play by Gross. Containing 22 scenes, the movie's film had a length of 5,000 feet.

The film, together with its rival, garnered financial success and the producers were encouraged to produce other Filipino-themed films.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Book: Pelikula: an essay on the Philippine film, 1897-1960. Cultural Center of the Philippines. Sotto, Agustin. 1992. May 4, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140504121446/http://nlpdl.nlp.gov.ph:9000/rpc/cat/finders/CC01/NLP00VM052mcd/v8/v2.pdf. May 4, 2014. dead.