Echorsis

Echorsis
Directed by Lemuel Lorca
Produced by Chris Cahilig
Screenplay by Jerry Gracio
Starring John Lapus
Kean Cipriano
Alex Medina
Music by Jonathan Ong
Edited by Benjamin Tolentino
Production
company
Insight 360 Films
Running time
110 min
Country Philippines
Language Filipino

Echorsis: Sabunutan Between Good and Evil (lit. Echorsis: Hair-pulling Between Good and Evil) or simply Echorsis is a 2016 Philippine dark comedy film directed by Lemuel Lorca and produced by Chris Cahilig of Insight 360, and is starred by John Lapus, Kean Cipriano, and Alex Medina. It premiered in cinemas on April 13, 2016.

Synopsis

The film revolves around a gigolo Carlo (Alex Medina), who was possessed by a gay entity after he deceived Kristoff (John Lapus) his closeted gay lover. Father Nick (Kean Cipriano) is then tasked to exorcise the spirit out of Carlo's body.

Cast

Main
Supporting

Production

The film was directed by Lemuel Lorca and was produced by Chris Cahilig under the production firm, Insight 360. Jerry Gracio served as writer of the film. Echorsis was described as a parody of The Exorcist.[1]

The concept for Echorsis was created in 2011, when director Lorca and writer Gracio were discussing of a concept for a film in 2011. They were laughing about the concept which revolves around someone being possessed by a gay demon. It was in 2012, that the two became serious about the concept and a script based on the said concept was completed by late 2015. One of the other challenges on producing the film is finding a producer to finance the film. The script was then sent to produce Chris Cahilig who is also a PR specialist.[2]

Producer, Cahilig described the film as an "out-of-the-box" comedy. On the second day since the film's premiere in cinemas, Cahilig remarked that Filipino moviegoers are ready for a black comedy such as Echorsis. The producer also remarked that the box office success of local films, English Only, Please, Heneral Luna, and That Thing Called Tadhana motivated the production team to continue on doing the Echorsis project despite the film's unconventional plot.[3]

Echorsis is Lorca's sixth film and the biggest in terms of budget and was described by the director as a slight "mainstream commercial". The "light" film was a contrast to Lorca's previous indie films which had a more serious mood.[2]

Casting

Alex Medina plays as the character, Carlo in the film who is a conman who victimizes gays gets possessed by different gay spirits of those he previously preyed on. According to Medina he was the last person who auditioned for the role. He said that he accepted the role saying that the film is "not a typical gay story" and that Echorsis tackles love and said its about "acceptance" and tackles many different issues.[4]

Medina commenting on his role as Carlo, a straight man who gets possessed by gay spirits, was challenging which he remarked as physically exhausting since the role demanded him to be flamboyant in selected scenes. He also felt uncomfortable with the bed scenes but remarked that he trusts his colleague Lapus and that he has been friends with Cipriano. Medina also expresses openness in doing other gay roles in future projects.[4]

Release

Marketing

The trailer for the film was released online in early February 2016. The trailer garnered close to a million views by February 22, 2016.[1] By April 15, 2016, the views garnered by the trailer counted almost 4 million.[3]

Theatrical release

Echorsis was released in cinemas nationwide in the Philippines on April 13, 2016, a week ahead as originally planned. The film was previously planned to be screened in April 20 but the opening date was moved to an earlier date due to public demand following the release of the film's trailer.[1] The film was rated R13 by the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board[3]

According to Medina, the film received low turnout on its opening day similar to what Heneral Luna which was momentarily removed from cinema line-up due to poor ticket sales on the first day. He expressed concern that Echorsis might risk being removed from cinema line-ups as well. However Lapus expressed optimism that the film will be patronized in the coming days especially the Filipino LGBT community due to positive comments on the movie trailer. Medina also said that the film's social media campaign was successful.[3]

Echorsis was given a second week in cinemas and was screening in eight cinemas in Market! Market!, Festival Mall, Trinoma, SM Sta. Mesa, Robinsons Galleria, SM North Edsa, SM City Manila and SM Megamall. This is after general cinema attendance was low on the first week of Echorsis' screening even for Hollywood-produced films. This low attendance was attributed by producer Cahillig to the high heat index recorded.[5]

Reception

Critical reception

Film critic Philbert Dy of ClickTheCity.com described the film as a "subversive little gem" and praised its bold depiction of the LGBT community. He also named the film as the "spiritual successor" of Zombadings. Another critic and writer, Oggs Cruz of Rappler had described the film overall as doing what it sets to do which is entertaining the audience while "deliberate forwarding a pervasive agenda".[5][6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "'Echorsis' trailer excites moviegoers". The Standard. 22 February 2016. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  2. 1 2 Franco, Bernie (16 March 2016). "Filmmaker reveals concept behind Alex Medina-starrer Echorsis". Philippine Entertainment Portal Inc. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Keep 'Echorsis' in movie theaters". Philippine Daily Inquirer. 14 April 2016. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  4. 1 2 Santos, Rhea Manila (12 April 2016). "Alex Medina on his new horror movie Echorsis: 'Hindi naman siya typical gay story'" [Alex Medina on his new horror movie Echorsis: ‘it's not a typical gay story’]. Push (in English and Filipino). ABS-CBN. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  5. 1 2 "Echorsis wins critics, now on 2nd-week run". The Philippine Star. 24 April 2016. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  6. Cruz, Oggs (19 April 2016). "'Echorsis' review: Closet comedy". Rappler. Retrieved 5 May 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.