Lastikman: Unang Banat

Mars Ravelo's Lastikman: Unang Banat (lit. 'Mars Ravelo's Lastikman: The First Stretch'), or simply Lastikman: Unang Banat, is a 2004 Philippine superhero film based on the comic book character Lastikman, directed by Mac Alejandre and written by RJ Nuevas. It stars Mark Bautista, Sarah Geronimo, Cherie Gil, John Estrada, Danilo Barrios, Elizabeth Oropesa, Joel Torre, Mark Gil, Bearwin Meily, and Tuesday Vargas. The film was released through Viva Films on December 25, 2004 as part of the 30th Metro Manila Film Festival.

Lastikman: Unang Banat
DVD Cover
Directed byMac Alejandre
Produced byVicente G. Del Rosario III
Veronique Del Rosario-Corpus
Screenplay byRJ Nuevas
Story byWali Ching
RJ Nuevas
Based onLastikman
by Mars Ravelo
StarringJohn Estrada
Danilo Barrios
Cherie Gil
Joel Torre
Elizabeth Oropesa
Bearwin Meily
Tuesday Vargas
Sarah Geronimo
Mark Bautista
Music by
CinematographyRegieben Romana
Edited byKelly M. Cruz
Distributed byViva Films
Release date
  • December 25, 2004 (2004-12-25)
CountryPhilippines
LanguageFilipino

Plot

Adrian (Mark Bautista) is just an ordinary boy who lacks skills and talents. He likes his friend Lara (Sarah Geronimo), but is often bullied by his classmates and kids in the neighborhood. Despite being a weakling, Adrian possesses a pure and brave heart when he tries to fight illegal loggers who cut trees on their barrio. Unfortunately, he is beaten by the loggers and left almost half dead. But Because of his pure personality, the enchanted rubber tree that he saves heals him and grants him powers that transform him into a super hero named Lastikman.

Casts

Main cast

Supporting cast

Accolades

Year Award-Giving Body Category Recipient Result
2004 Metro Manila Film Festival Best Visual Effects Fel Rodolfo Won
gollark: I meant loading them was very parallelizable, not playing them. Not sure if Minecraft does that.
gollark: It's silly though, they're very parallelizable.
gollark: If you haven't found it yet you probably want to look up "ARM ABI conventions" or something.
gollark: It would probably be helpful if you explain why you need this to avoid XY problems.
gollark: The general standard for encrypted partition things, on Linux anyway, is LUKS. You *may* just be able to put a valid LUKS header in front of a block of random data, but it would be basically equivalent to just *actually* make an encrypted partition with a random key you then delete.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.