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Pia
(Angelica Panganiban) and Nix (Carlo Aquino) meet at a club. She is drunk and
pushy. He is shy and socially awkward. After a few more drinks they start openly
lambasting one another’s Facebook account. He takes her home so she won’t have
to drive and ends up having breakfast at her place. Courtship follows until the
two of them finally become a couple. And they lived happily ever after. NOT. To
him, she is a rebound romance. To her, he is another chance at love. As they
get to know each other and find out secret hang-ups with exes and the like,
they realize that they don’t know one another that well after all. Once the
honeymoon stage is over, they decide to break up. Two years later, they meet
again. Will sparks fly once more or will they finally get the closure that both
of them need.
Panganiban
and Aquino grew up before our eyes. The thing with child actors is that you
expect them to be adorable for a few years before they eventually fade into
obscurity. Both of their careers were not without challenges and they weren’t
even the most popular in their batch, yet here they are now. Becoming a couple
twice, it feels like they were destined to make this movie and play these
roles. Perhaps that’s why the film has been so wildly successful? People don’t
see Nix and Pia, they see Carlo and Angelica.
That’s
not necessarily a bad thing. Both of their relationships are ancient history
and they are both working actors. You don’t even have to ask if they have
chemistry because they obviously do. With both of them apparently single as of
press time, maybe this is just wishful thinking from a nation so obsessed with
love teams that what they see on the reel they hope would translate to the real
deal. That’s not a bad marketing slant to be honest, and we’re not complaining
at all.
The
end product has this indie kind of feel that works well for these two actors’
current profiles, no need to compete with younger love teams. Nowadays there
seems to be a divide between the mainstream and indie formula as far as
romantic comedies are concerned. The former follows a strict format, from the
musical score all the way to the supporting characters. The latter enjoys more
liberty and tends to be more realistic, focusing more on the dialogues and the
nitty-gritty that their popular counterparts tend to skip for a more saccharine
offering.
With
the success of similar narratives such as Sid & Aya earlier this year,
Aquino’s Meet Me in St. Gallen, and even Panganiban’s runaway hit That Thing
Called Tadhana, the alternative anti-rom-com is on the rise. With major
production outfits taking note, the question now is, will it be the new norm? When
the stories are that relatable, they bring about the feeling that it can also
happen to you. And isn’t that the reason why we watch movies to begin with? To
relate via escapism?
It
has to be relatable. Maybe that is the new magic formula at the end of the day.
With dialogues that do not shy away from being crass and borderline vulgar at
times, materials like this cater to a larger crowd that tends to identify with
such style in real life, because it closely mirrors their own. The main
characters are not political scions or small-town lasses cursed with beauty. Instead,
Pia and Nix are individuals that you might run into at 7-11 or at the club,
like friends whose lives require some fixing.
2 creature(s) gave a damn:
Didn't you watch Never Not Love You? I was waiting for your review.
@VET - unfortunately not. Was it good?
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