Dayo: Sa Mundo ng Elementalia
Dayo: Sa Mundo ng Elementalia | |
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Dayo Official Poster | |
Directed by | Robert Quilao |
Produced by | Cutting Edge Productions |
Written by |
Artemio Abad Eric Cabahug |
Starring |
Nash Aguas Katrina Legaspi Michael V. John Manalo Noel Trinidad Nova Villa Pokwang Johnny Delgado Pocholo Gonzales James Ronald and Rodfil Obeso |
Music by | Jessie Lasaten |
Distributed by | Cutting Edge Productions |
Release dates |
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Country | Philippines |
Language |
Filipino Tagalog |
Budget | ₱56 million |
Box office | ₱5.6 million |
Dayo: Sa Mundo ng Elementalia (lit: Vistor: In the World of Elementalia) is a 2008 Philippine animated adventure comedy film and the Philippines’ first all-digital full-length animated feature film by Cutting Edge Productions, advertised as "tradigital", a mix of traditional animation with 3D animation. It reinvents ghastly images of Philippine mythical creatures into heartwarming characters in a young boy's adventure. This $1.3 million (roughly ₱58 million) production composed of over 500 local animators features a “tra-digital animation” technique using paperless 2D and 3D technologies. It has 2D animation for its characters and 3D animation for the backdrops.
The production team of Dayo spent several months developing the story, mood, and the whole package of the animation. While writing the script, the writers consulted a book on local mythology by Maximo Ramos entitled Creatures of Philippine Lower Mythology. Compared to the usual three-year completion of a traditional full-length animation, this film aimed to be finished within a short span of two years.
Dayo is written by Artemio Abad, Jr. and Eric Cabahug and directed by Robert Quilao. It is among the eight movies (and the first of movie of its kind) that was screened during the 34th Metro Manila Film Festival in December 2008.
The story revolves around Bubuy who has to save his grandparents who were abducted and brought to the strange land called Elementalia, which is home to a host of strange creatures from Philippine mythology. It was an official entry to 34th Metro Manila Film Festival.
Synopsis
Dayo is a heartwarming story of overcoming one's fear and succeeding over adversity. The plot revolves around Bubuy (voiced by Nash Aguas) who is out to save his abducted grandparents in the land of Elementalia, a magical and mystical world that houses many of the Philippines' mythical creatures and other enchanted elements. This locally produced animated film aims to reintroduce the other side of mythical creatures like the tikbalang, kapre, manananggal, and aswang by giving a new dimension to these typically reviled creatures.
Production
According to executive producer Jessie Lasaten, the film required the work of over five hundred artists and took two years to complete. The film's entry into the Metro Manila Film Festival proved to be problematic when the screening committee rejected the script written by Temi Abad, Jr. and Eric Cabahug. The committee challenged Cutting Edge Productions to prove that Dayo was financially viable. Dayo's soundtrack used full orchestration from Gerard Salonga and FILharmoniKA. In addition, Lea Salonga performed the movie's theme's song "Lipad".[1]
Dayo's budget was revealed to be $1,300,000.[2]
Voice casts
- Nash Aguas as Bubuy
- Katrina Legaspi as Anna
- John Manalo as Carlo
- Michael V. as Narsi
- Peque Gallaga as Lolo Nano
- Noel Trinidad as Lolo Miong
- Nova Villa as Lola Nita
- Johnny Delgado as Carpio
- Pocholo Gonzales as Toti and Hal-Lan
- Pokwang as Vicky
- Gabe Mercado as Jo
- Laurice Guillen as Bruha, Diwata and Kapress
- Carl John Barrameda as Arvi
- Igi Boy Flores as Mark
- James "Moymoy" Obeso as Tiyanak
- Rodfill "Roadfill" Obeso as Tiyanak
Reception
Critical
Dayo was given a grade of "A" by the Cinema Evaluation Board, which allowed the producers a 100% amusement tax rebate. It was also endorsed by the Philippines' Department of Education (DepEd) and the National Council for Children's Television. The film was praised for presenting elements derived from folklore, myths, pop culture in the Philippine perspective. Its soundtrack and voice acting marked other strong points. On the technical side, however, flaws on animation rendering and shading were noted.[3] Most notably, Dayo received praise for its cel-animated portrayal of Manila as well as its catchy presentation of Filipino culture.[4]
Box office results
- P1,200,000 (December 25, 2008)[5]
- P2,200,000 (December 26, 2008)[6]
- P3,200,000 (December 28, 2008)
- P3,700,000 (December 29, 2008)[7]
- P4,100,000 (December 31, 2008)[8]
- P5,600,000 (January 7, 2009)[9]
Awards
At the awards ceremony of the 2008 Metro Manila Film Festival, Dayo won four awards for sound, visual effects, musical score and song.[10]
2008 Metro Manila Film Festival
- Best Sound: Albert Idioma and Whannie Dellosa
- Best Visual Effects: Robert Quilao
- Best Musical Score: Jessie Lasaten
- Best Theme Song: "Lipad" by Jessie Lasaten and Artemio Abad Jr., performed by Lea Salonga
Official Soundtracks
- Lipad - Lea Salonga
- Lipad (Rock version) - Roots of Nature
- Kapit - Moymoy Palaboy
- Daybreak - Juan Lunar
- Kasalo at Kasuyo - Noel Cabangon
- Pang-surprise - Jay Durias
See also
- Urduja – a Filipino animated film
- 2008 Metro Manila Film Festival
References
- ↑ ‘Dayo’ animates MMFF - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
- ↑ Dayo: Showcasing local animation - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
- ↑ PEP REVIEW: "Dayo" brims with authentic Filipino elements | Movies | PEP.ph: The Number One Site for Philippine Showbiz
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Comedy still rules MMFF - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
- ↑ MMFF ’08 makes P248.5M in 5 days - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
- ↑ ‘Tanging Ina’ breaches P100M in 7 days - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
- ↑ Record-breaking year for MMFF - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
- ↑ "Dayo" wins four trophies during 34th MMFF | Movies | PEP.ph: The Number One Site for Philippine Showbiz