Halik sa Hangin

2015 Filipino film
  • Enrico C. Santos
  • Patrick John R. Valencia
Produced by
  • Charo Santos-Concio
  • Malou N. Santos
Starring
  • Gerald Anderson
  • Julia Montes
  • JC de Vera
CinematographyMoises ZeeEdited byBeng BandongMusic byFrancis S. Concio
Production
companies
  • ABS-CBN Film Productions
  • Cinemedia
Distributed byStar Cinema
Release date
  • January 28, 2015 (2015-01-28)
Running time
110 minutes[1]CountryPhilippinesLanguageFilipinoBox office₱28 million[2]

Halik sa Hangin (lit.'Kiss in the Wind') is a 2015 Filipino romantic horror and psychological thriller film, directed by Emmanuel Q. Palo and written by Enrico Santos.[3] It stars Gerald Anderson, Julia Montes, and JC de Vera.[4] This was Edu Manzano's first film appearance after his special participation role in the 2003 hit comedy film Ang Tanging Ina. The film was released on January 28, 2015, in the Philippines.

The film deals with a young woman who is brought to Baguio by her new stepfather. While she struggles with her new family and surroundings, she finds herself torn between two young men who bring passion into her life.[1]

Plot

Mia struggles to adjust to a new life in Baguio with her mother Teresa, her stepfather John, and her half-brother Sam, and harbors a lingering resentment over the death of her biological father Rene. Despite John's misgivings, Mia secretly brings home a guitar from an abandoned house. Shortly afterwards, she attends a party at the Diplomat Hotel and meets Gio, a mysterious young man consistently dressed in the same outfit. Mia and Gio fall in love with each other, with Gio teaching her how to play the guitar in a park with a young girl named Pauline and Mia subsequently waking up with roses all over her bed. Gio also helps Mia overcome her traumas from witnessing her father's death and defends her from a group of bullies led by Wilmer. However, Gio strongly resists having his picture uploaded by Mia on social media.

When Wilmer commits dies in bizarre circumstances following his encounter with Gio, Mia's family and friends question her over her involvement, noting that Wilmer committed suicide using Mia's cutter. When Mia explains that she was with Gio the entire time, she is told that she never seen with another person the entire time she was with Gio and was seen talking to herself, with all other evidence of their relationship proven to be illusory. A desperate Mia convinces her group to accompany her to the park where she meets with Gio, only to stumble upon a cemetery containing Pauline's grave. As Mia's sanity is questioned, she reconciles with Teresa when she clarifies the circumstances that led to her separation from Rene.

Mia later encounters Gio and chastises him for being untruthful to her. Gio then dares her to meet his family. That night, Mia arrives at Gio's house to meet with his family, only to be met coolly by them. Gio and his family then reveal themselves as ghosts, prompting Mia to flee in terror. The next day, Mia confronts Gio at the cemetery for haunting her, but Gio demands that she join him in the afterlife and threatens to kill those closest to her, starting with her best friend Alvin. Mia and Alvin then meet Quinn, a nun who was Gio's previous girlfriend, who tells them that Gio had a turbulent family background that led him to commit suicide, and that Quinn's failure to join him in a suicide pact is what pushes Gio to haunt the living.

As Mia and Alvin try to protect her family from Gio's wrath, John tries to destroy the guitar, which turns out to have belonged to Gio, but has his hand burned by an angry Gio, who manifests himself as a poltergeist. When Gio threatens Sam, Mia reluctantly agrees to join Gio into the afterlife and goes with him to the Diplomat Hotel. Fr. Abellera, Mia's spiritual advisor, deduces that the only way for the hauntings to be stopped is for Gio's ashes to be blessed and goes to Gio's house with Sam. Meanwhile, Alvin follows Mia to the Diplomat Hotel while Mia reasons with Gio. Alvin tries to exorcise Gio, but the latter partially possesses Alvin and leads him to self-harm while Fr. Abellera and Sam are tormented by the ghosts of Gio's family. In tears, Mia agrees to die on condition that her loved ones will not be harmed, and jumps off a ledge. However, Sam manages to bless Gio's ashes in time, and Gio catches Mia before she falls further. Gio tells Mia he loves her before they share one final kiss as he departs to the afterlife, finally at peace.

Some time later, a garage sale is being held for Gio's old things. A woman picks up Gio's guitar and starts to play it, only for a string to break and blood to appear on her face.

Cast

Production

Filming

It is set and filmed in Baguio. According to director Emmanuel Quindo Palo in picking Baguio as the movie's setting, he describe Baguio as overpopulated but no one can ever question the city's picturesque landscape which serves as an eye-candy for those watching Halik sa Hangin. Several scenes from the film were also shot in a 1930s abandoned American house and at the supposedly haunted Diplomat Hotel, both located in Baguio.[5]

Reception

Critical response

The Filipino Scribe gave the film a rate of 3.5 out of 5.0 praising Manzano and Raymundo for their performances, saying, “Edu Manzano and Ina Raymundo only had limited exposure in the movie, but they portrayed their respective roles as a loving mom and a strict but perpetually-concerned stepfather rather convincingly.”

Jocelyn Valle of PEP.ph commended Montes' performance, stating, "Julia, the actress, shows great commitment and earnestness in playing the character of Mia. She makes the viewer feel Mia’s emotional stages of entering into the territory of romantic love — apprehension, excitement, caution, bliss — until reality bites. She shines the brightest in the pivotal scene where Mia is suspected to becoming a mental case, and Mia has to convince everybody that she’s telling the truth."[6]

Accolades

Association Category Recipient(s) and nominee(s) Result Ref.
Young Critics Circle Best Performance Julia Montes Nominated [7]
Best Achievement in Cinematography and Visual Design Moises Zee and Manny Morfe Nominated
Best Achievement in Editing Beng Bandong Nominated
Best Achievement in Sound and Aural Orchestration Addiss Tabong and Francis Concio Nominated

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Halik sa Hangin (2015)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  2. ^ "ABS-CBN 1Q 2016 Investor's Briefing Presentation Materials" (PDF). ABS-CBN Corporation. May 12, 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 8, 2020. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  3. ^ "Romance, suspense in 'Halik sa Hangin' trailer". ABS-CBN News. January 13, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2015.
  4. ^ Calderon, Ricky (January 21, 2015). "Julia Montes topbills thriller 'Halik sa Hangin'". The Philippine Star. Retrieved March 17, 2015.
  5. ^ "Gerald's 'haunting' experience while shooting 'Halik sa Hangin'". ABS-CBN Entertainment. January 27, 2015. Retrieved January 14, 2016.
  6. ^ Valle, Jocelyn (January 30, 2015). "MOVIE REVIEW: Julia Montes-Gerald Anderson starrer Halik sa Hangin - PEP.ph: The Number One Site for Philippine Showbiz". Philippine Entertainment Portal. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  7. ^ "Young Critics Circle names Da Dog Show best film of 2015". yccfilmdesk. April 3, 2016. Retrieved April 10, 2016.
  • Halik sa Hangin at IMDb