"I wish I knew how to quit you"
"Then why don't you? Why don't you just let me be?"
This scene was everything. Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal were phenomenal.
"I wish I knew how to quit you"
"Then why don't you? Why don't you just let me be?"
This scene was everything. Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal were phenomenal.
Sure, there are things that you can nitpick about this film, but I guess what I really appreciated about it was the great characterization and the message that it wanted to deliver, which Zig Dulay and Ricky Lee DID deliver. I did not have any expectations about it from the get-go, which is probably why I enjoyed it more than I imagined. Furthermore, it is yet again a constant reminder that the far more dangerous criminals are not the ones in jail but those who are in positions of power.
I did not think that this movie would leave me so emotionally wrecked. The plot is simple and straightforward yet it affected me in so many ways - maybe because it was dramatic but also very real at the same time. Wooshik's acting is phenomenal especially in the crying scene at the church when he saw Beom-Tae. As a character, there was more to Youngjae than his delinquent acts, he was just a boy whose house was never a home,…
While some may find the lines said by Tere and Bene as the most memorable ones, I find Chico's conversation with his father as the one that I'll remember the most. When he said, "Galit? Hindi ako galit. Tapos na ako sa galit. Naandon na ako sa puntong wala na akong pakialam." That scene is one of the few heavy dramas in the film but also adds another dimension to the concept of forgiveness which is very often only viewed…