

Star Cinema and Viva Films’ Finally Found Someone starring Sarah Geronimo as Aprilyn “April” Esguerra and John Lloyd Cruz as Rafael “Raffy” Sandoval. In order to stop the bleeding and before Randy turns into a pariah, his father, Mayor Garcia (Dennis Padilla) hires Public Relations (PR) magician Rafael “Raffy” Sandoval (John Lloyd Cruz). Randy’s callous act causes his trust rating as a wannabe-politician to nosedive, an anathema to every politician in the history of the world.

#Finally found someone movie#
That cold open is worth the price of the movie ticket.įinally Found Someone centers around Aprilyn’s misery at being jilted at the altar by the almost-absent groom-to-be Randy Garcia (Enchong Dee), henceforth known as #PanisGroom. All these happen while netizens film the proceedings and weigh in on her heartbrokenness. Watching Aprilyn gamely push the bridal card, ride a converted tricycle, and climb up the fire escape ladder while fully made-up, in heels and in her trousseau is just half the fun, the other half is staring at her flawless and non-sweaty face and armpits.
#Finally found someone series#
The series of unfortunate events that befall bride-to-be turned #ChosBride Aprilyn Esguerra (Sarah Geronimo) is something I will not wish to my two frenemies, but it makes for an entertaining introduction that hooks the viewers from the first nanosecond of the film. The cold open of Finally Found Someone is one of the most hilarious I have watched in a while. Geronimo and Cruz, collectively known as AshLloyd, do not disappoint in their recent movie directed by Theodore Boborol. Star Cinema and Viva Films’ Finally Found Someone is the fourth movie of Philippines’ Ultimate Pop Superstar Sarah Geronimo and ultimate leading man John Lloyd Cruz after their Laida Magtalas – Miggy Montenegro trilogy. So at least the boy was able to get some sleep.This is a review of Star Cinema and Viva Films’ movie Finally Found Someone. “OMG, you can hear that? I’m so embarrassed! Yes, I’ll stop scratching. “Then could you at least stop scratching all night?” the boy said. “Okay, so you’re going to just stay here haunting this house? Forever?” “Do I really want to spend my last days on earth, alive or otherwise, reading such a dense book? No way.” “But it’s what you need to do to finally leave this world,” the boy said. All the metafictional postmodern formatting and structural stuff. “Have you seen that book?” the ghost said. “So,” said the boy, “why don’t you just, like, read it?” “So, I had this friend, okay? And she kept saying, ‘You’ve got to read House of Leaves,’ and I kept saying, ‘I will, I totally will.’” “Oh, it’s nothing so dramatic,” the ghost said, its voice more casual than before. “What do you want? To avenge your death? To scare us like someone scared you? To finally declare your love for someone? What is it? Tell me and I’ll do anything I can to help you, as long as you leave this house so that I can finally sleep soundly!” “Jeepers!” the boy cried, finally able to speak. “And now, you shan’t be rid of me! For I will haunt this house until I resolve my unfinished business!” “So you’ve finally found me,” the ghost said in a booming voice. And when he cast his flashlight around and settled on something pale and semi-translucent floating in the corner, the only reason he didn’t scream was because his vocal cords had seized up in terror. In the middle of the night.ĭespite all his bravado, the boy’s legs still quaked as he climbed the stairs to the attic. So brave, in fact, that he would go up there and check for himself. No, the boy wouldn’t even give the word a thought. Yes, the real estate agent had alluded to there being “certain circumstances” that made it difficult to sell before the family came along, moving from the big city to settle in the country. Yes, the house he and his parents had moved into was old. It’s just a critter stuck in the attic, he told himself as he pulled the blanket over his head each night. The scratching the boy heard coming from his ceiling had kept him up for nearly a week.
