American Adobo Movie Review
American Adobo Review

"American Adobo" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Laurice GuillenProducer : Vincent Nebrida,Tony Gloria,Steve Grenyo
Screenwiter : Vincent Nebrida
Starring : Paolo Montalban,Dina Bonnevie,Ricky Davao,Cherry Pie Picache,Randy Becker,Christopher De Leon
The filmmaking feast continues on the big screen with American Adobo, the
latest munching melodrama to incorporate the mysticism of ethnic food with
fragile personalities and their fluctuating emotions. Following the tradition
of cinematic entrees such as Eat Drink Man Woman, Tortilla Soup, ABCD, and
What’s Cooking?, American Adobo tries to add some spice to its quirky
sentiments but the taste is all too familiar.
In the film, we are introduced to the topsy-turvy lives of New York-based
Filipino-American friends and their head-scratching predicaments. The group
gathers around their tasty native dishes and regularly discusses issues like
friendship, romance, etc. The food in question—known as adobo—is as provocative
and involving as the characters. Marissa (Dina Bonnevie) is the ambitious
working girl that seemingly has everything at her disposal but unfortunately
gets saddled down with a cheating boyfriend named Sam (Randy Becker), who has a
roving eye. Good-natured Tere (Cherry Pie Pichache) is in dire need of
companionship, but she diligently handles things around the kitchen. Hotshot
hunk Raul (Paolo Montalban) is the resident ladies’ man. Mike (Christopher De
Leon) is bogged down in domestic turmoil, and fantasizes about returning to the
Philippines to escape the madness of family life. And Gerry (Ricky Davao) is a
closeted gay who valiantly tries to hide his sexual orientation from his mother
and her traditional ways.
Although the characters are spunky and intriguing at times, the film feels as
if it’s going through sensationalistic motions to justify the contrived hoopla
of the hectic screenplay. Director Laurice Guillen is at her best when she lets
chaos rule, but as the dilemmas pile up, the film disintegrates into a
hysterical, haggard romp. See Marissa in all her desperation try to hang on to
a no-good Sam. See Raul deal with his possible contracting of AIDS. See Tere
commit accidental arson in her own kitchen, only to discover love in the arms
of a heroic fireman. And so on.
Guillen uses all the tricks in the book to try to hook you into loving American
Adobo's quirky players. But corny scenes consisting of last minute deathbed
discussions or sitcom-induced antics that revolve around intercepting
incriminating gay-themed photos in the mail just don't do the trick.
The old adobo-out-the-nose trick.
Reviewer: Frank Ochieng



