The Third Party

The Third Party

Theatrical movie poster
Directed by Jason Paul Laxamana
Written by
  • Charlene Sawit-Esguerra
  • Patrick John Valencia
Story by Enrico C. Santos
Starring
Music by Jessie Lasaten
Cinematography Dexter Dela Peña
Edited by Noah Tonga
Production
company
Distributed by Star Cinema
Release dates
October 12, 2016
Country Philippines
Language Tagalog
Box office ₱110 million
(as of November 2, 2016)[1]

The Third Party is a 2016 Filipino romantic comedy drama film starring Angel Locsin, Sam Milby and Zanjoe Marudo. It is directed by Jason Paul Laxamana from a screenplay written by Charlene Sawit-Esguerra and Patrick John Valencia.[2][3]

The film was produced by ABS-CBN Film Productions and was theatrically released in Philippine cinemas on October 12, 2016, by Star Cinema.

The film marks Angel Locsin's second movie this year after Everything About Her, and serves a reunion for her and Zanjoe Marudo who both starred in the 2012 film One More Try; both films were also released by Star Cinema.[4]

Premise

The story revolves between exes Andi, an events manager who aspires to be a fashion designer (portrayed by Angel) and Max, a cosmetic surgeon (portrayed by Sam) who both find ways to make their relation intact after a breakup. But later on, Max found a new love unto a gay oncologist for children, Christian portrayed by Zanjoe. The film also tackles friendship and how a person gets to know more about himself.[5][6]

Cast

Main cast

Supporting Cast

Release

The Third Party was theatrically released in the Philippines on October 12, 2016, by Star Cinema.[1]

Reception

Box office

The film has grossed ₱10 million on its first day.[1] the film is successful nationwide and worldwide, despite on its genre. Film successfully gave the best shot for LGBT community. The Third Party breached 100 Million mark on its 3rd week of showing. A Film joined the Top films that breached 100 Million. It Expects more viewers on its 4th Blockbuster Week

Music

Baby, I Love Your Way by Morissette Amon and Harana (originally by Peter Frampton) was released as the official soundtrack for the movie.[8]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.