MOVIE FEATURE: She's Dating the Gangster

5:15 PM

by Jamiellie Brianne S. Chua
3SLP



          “Timing… such a b*tch.”

          Based on the novel written by Bianca Bernardino, She’s Dating the Gangster, one would expect the film adaptation to follow the cliché bad-boy-meets-good-girl love story and end on a “and they lived happily ever after” note. Especially with the KathNiel tandem playing out the lead roles, the film was just dripping with cliché. But wait. There’s more.

          The film begins with Kenji de los Reyes (Richard Gomez) giving out a speech in his friend’s wedding reception. And as he does, his son, Kenneth (Daniel Padilla), was in a bathroom stall making out with a girl. The girl’s grandfather stumbles upon them and chases after Kenneth. Thus, the wedding reception was ruined. Kenji reprimands his son, but Kenneth replies harshly by bringing up his father’s ‘affair’ and wished for Kenji to have died instead of his mom. The next day, as Kenneth arrives home drunk, the news flashes that several people have gone missing in a plane crash. Kenji was one of those people. As he arrives at the airport demanding for information on his father’s whereabouts, he meets Kelay Dizon (Kathryn Bernardo), a girl who claims to be his father’s daughter. More questions rise about his father’s past. Kenneth and Kelay reluctantly work together and get to know each other as they go on a misadventure to seek answers, search for the father, and unravel the past.

          The KathNiel chemistry is undeniably charming and appealing. Despite their usual delivery of cute cliché romantic plots wherein the usual would be teenagers-blinded-by-juvenile-love-going-against-the-world, in this film, a practical and mature side of love is served. The rest of the characters did well, too. The continuous twists are inevitably unfortunately terribly teleserye-cliché, but the responses of each character certainly go straight to the heart and bring out feelings and secret hopes that one would often deny. What I do criticize is the portrayal of a gangster, especially during the 90s. The bandana and skateboard are not enough. The ‘gang’ he belongs to seems more like a mischievous barkada. Not a gang. And about the “albolaryo” look, it was no wardrobe misfortune. It would be one of the questions to be answered as the past is unraveled. The ending was not that difficult to predict, but the feelings are difficult to forget.

          The film is quite William Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” mixed with Nicholas Sparks’s “A Walk to Remember”. The classic cliché jives are inevitably present but the modern and realistic Filipino touches keep it from turning into another fairytale. Definitely a refreshing air for the hopeful and hopeless romantics.

          “I can’t breathe.”

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