Text 0939-7325372 for reservation. Detailed list is attached. Thanks.
Bad Seed, The (1956) Can evil be inherited? That's the question posed by Maxwell Anderson in his stage play The Bad Seed. This 1956 film adaptation stars many actors from the Broadway version, including Nancy Kelly, Patty McCormack, Henry Jones and Eileen Heckart. Young McCormack plays Rhoda, a too-good-to-be-true grade schooler who occasionally exhibits a vicious streak whenever things don't turn out her way. During a picnic, one of Rhoda's schoolmates is drowned; the victim is a boy who'd won a penmanship medal that Rhoda had coveted. Nancy Kelly, the girl's mother, slowly comes to the horrible conclusion that Rhoda was responsible for the boy's death--a suspicion fueled by the discovery that Kelly, who was adopted as an infant, is the daughter of a convicted murderess. Meanwhile, a moronic handyman (Henry Jones) accidentally tumbles to Rhoda's secret, whereupon he is ""accidentally"" burned to death. Realizing that Rhoda must be stopped before she can kill again, and reasoning that the authorities would never believe the truth, Kelly tries to put the girl to sleep permanently with barbituates, then shoots herself. The play's ironic ending--the mother dies, while the unsuspected Rhoda lives on--is sacrificed for a ""divine retribution"" finale in the film, with Rhoda being punished by a convenient bolt of lightning. This alteration is acceptable, but director Mervin LeRoy further gilds the lily with an asinine closing-credits sequence wherein Nancy Kelly throws Patty McCormack over her knee and administers a spanking! Nominated, 1957 Academy Awards, USA - Oscar Best Actress in a Leading Role (Nancy Kelly), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Eileen Heckart), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Patty McCormack), Best Cinematography; Winner, 1957 Golden Globes, USA - Golden Globe Best Supporting Actress (Eileen Heckart). Nominated, Golden Globe Best Supporting Actress (Patty McCormack)
Blue Is the Warmest Color (2013) The colorful, electrifying romance that took the Cannes Film Festival by storm courageously dives into a young womans experiences of first love and sexual awakening. Blue Is the Warmest Color stars the remarkable newcomer Adèle Exarchopoulos as a high schooler who, much to her own surprise, plunges into a thrilling relationship with a female twentysomething art student, played by Léa Seydoux. Directed by Abdellatif Kechiche, this finely detailed, intimate epic sensitively renders the erotic abandon of youth. It has captivated international audiences and been widely embraced as a defining love story for the new century. (www.criterion.com) Winner, 2013 Cannes Film Festival - FIPRESCI Prize Competition, Palme d'Or Shared with: Adèle Exarchopoulos (actress), Léa Seydoux (actress) For the first time ever the prize was also officially awarded to two of the actors.
Death in Venice (Morte a Venezia) (1971) Based on a novel by Thomas Mann, Death in Venice stars Dirk Bogarde as a German composer who is terrified that he has lost all vestiges of humanity. While visiting Venice, Bogarde falls in love with a beautiful young boy (Bjorn Andresen). The relationship is ruined by Bogarde's obsession with the boy's youth and physical perfection; the composer realizes that the child represents an ideal that he can never match. The character played by Dirk Bogarde is evidently intended to be Gustav Mahler, whose haunting music is featured on the film's soundtrack. (www.allrovi.com) Nominated, 1972 Academy Awards, USA - Oscar Best Costume Design; Winner, 1971 Cannes Film Festival -25th Anniversary Prize. Nominated - Palme d'Or; Winner, 1971 Golden Globes, Italy - Golden Globe Best Film
Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles (Qian li zou dan qi) (2005) On the heels of such extravagant historical swordplay epics as Hero and House of Flying Daggers, Mainland Chinese director Zhang Yimou returns to the reins to tell this intimate tale of an aging father who attempts to remedy a longstanding rift with his grown son. Summoned to Tokyo by his daughter-in-law, Rie (Shinobu Terajima), village fisherman Gou-ichi Takata (Ken Takakura), arrives at a city hospital to find his son, Ken-ichi (Kiichi Nakai), bedridden by liver cancer. Though Gou-ichi attempts to use the visit as a catalyst to heal a decade-long dispute between the pair, stubborn Ken-ichi rejects his father's attempt at reconciliation outright. Subsequently handed a videotape by Rie before departing back to the countryside, Gou-ichi returns home unsuccessful in his efforts to build a bridge of peace between himself and his ailing son. Upon watching the videotape, a research project exploring the Chinese folk arts that was shot by Ken-ichi in the Southern province of Yunnan, Gou-ichi is oddly affected by the onscreen failure of his son in convincing well-known opera singer Li Jiamin (playing himself) to perform the titular song, a classic operatic piece espousing the values of friendship. Now determined to travel to Yunnan and videotape the performance that his son could not, Gou-ichi embarks on a life-changing quest that will not only give him a greater understanding of the relationship between himself and his own son, but set into motion a healing process that will also have a profound impact on the troubled opera singer and the man's long-lost illegitimate son as well. Winner, 2007 Hong Kong Film Awards - Hong Kong Film Award Best Asian Film (China); Winner, 2006 San Diego Film Critics Society Awards - SDFCS Award Best Actor (Ken Takakura), Best Foreign-Language Film
Son of Man (2006) The story of the life and death of Jesus Christ gets a new (and strongly politicized) retelling in a powerful drama from Africa. Mary (Pauline Malefane) is seeking shelter in a schoolhouse during a skirmish in the midst of a bloody civil war when she is visited by an angel of the Lord, who tells her that she will give birth to the son of God. Mary raises Jesus (Andile Kosi) until he grows to adulthood; he then sets out on his own, preaching a new faith which embraces compassion and non-violence while rejecting the corruption and brutality of the current political leadership. Jesus' teachings attract a handful of disciples ranging in age, background, and gender, but as a military occupation force takes over the land, the actions of those who oppose their authority are monitored closely by the new government, and Jesus and his associates are no exception. While intelligence agents regard Jesus as subversive but harmless, one of his disciples, Judas (Jim Hgxabaze), secretly meets with the authorities and convinces them the mysterious miracle worker is up to no good. (www.allrovi.com) Nominated, 2006 Sundance Film Festival -Grand Jury Prize World Cinema - Dramatic
Soong Sisters, The (Song jia huang chao)*(1997) At the turn of the 20th century, the three Soong sisters married three of the most influential figures in the history of China. Watch the sisters journey from their college years in America to their lives with the men who shaped modern China. (www.amazon.com) Winner, 1998 Hong Kong Film Awards - Hong Kong Film Award Best Actress (Maggie Cheung), Best Supporting Actor (Wen Jiang), Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction, Best Costume & Make Up Design, Best Original Film Score. Nominated - Hong Kong Film Award Best Picture, Best Director
Taste of Cherry (Ta'm e guilass )(1997) Iranian auteur Abbas Kiarostamis Taste of Cherry is an emotionally complex meditation on life and death. Middle-aged Mr. Badii (Homayoun Ershadi) drives through the hilly outskirts of Tehransearching for someone to rescue or bury him. (www.criterion.com) Winner,1997 Cannes Film Festival - Palme d'Or Tied with The Eel (1997). Winner, 1009 Society of Film Critics Awards, USA -NSFC Award Best Foreign Language Film
VCD
Breaking the Silence (Piao liang ma ma) (2000) Gong Li stars in this low-key drama about a single mother who will do anything to provide for her son. Sun Liying (Li) struggles to care for her hearing-impaired child Zheng Da (Gao Xin) after her taxi driver husband divorces her. After Zheng Da gets his hearing aid smashed in a fight with classmates, Sun Liying sets out to raise 5,000 yuan (a small fortune) to buy him a replacement. A friend helps her set up an unauthorized bookstall, which soon gets raided by the police. Later she splits her time delivering newspapers and cleaning house for a rich businessman. 2000 Golden Rooster Awards - Best Actress (Li Gong); 2000 Hawaii International Film Festival - Netpac Award; 2000 Montréal World Film Festival - Best Actress. Tied with Isabelle Huppert for Merci pour le chocolat (2000).
Others, The (2001) Spanish filmmaker Alejandro Amenabar's first English-language production is a creepy period ghost story that continues in the vein of his earlier art house hit Open Your Eyes (1997). Nicole Kidman stars as Grace, a devoutly religious mother of two ailing children who has moved with her family to a mansion on the English coast while awaiting her husband's return from World War II, though he has been declared missing. Their children, Anne (Alakina Mann) and Nicholas (James Bentley), both suffer from a rare photosensitivity disease that renders them extremely vulnerable to sunlight, prompting Grace's rule of having only one door open in the house at a time. When Anne begins claiming to see ghosts, Grace at first believes her newly arrived family of eccentric servants to be responsible, but chilling events and visions soon lead her to believe that something supernatural is indeed going on. (www.allmovie.com) Winner, 2001 Flanders International Film Festival - FIPRESCI Prize (Alejandro Amenábar For brilliantly resurrecting a classic genre, through a writer-director-composer's deeply haunting vision of light and darkness. Winner, 2002 Goya Awards - Goya Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Editing, Best Film, Best Production Design, Best Production Supervision, Best Screenplay - Original, Best Sound; Winner, 2001 Flanders International Film Festival - FIPRESCI Prize (Alejandro Amenábar For brilliantly resurrecting a classic genre, through a writer-director-composer's deeply haunting vision of light and darkness. Nominated, Grand Prix; Nominated, 2002 Golden Globes, USA - Golden Globe Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama (Nicole Kidman); Nominated, 2001 Venice Film Festival - Golden Lion
CONCERTS:
Justin Bieber 2011 EP Never Say Never The Remixes Includes Never Say Never, That Should Be Me, Somebody to Love, Up, Overboard, Born to be Somebody, Baby, Stuck in the Moment, Eenie Meenie, Kiss and Tell, One Less Lonely Girl, Love Me, One Time. Bonus: justin Timberlake's MTV - Sexy Back, Cry Me a River, Señorita, Like i Love you, Work It, Rocky your Body, My Love, Rehab, What Goes Around Comes Around, Give It to Me, Cry Me a River, Signs, Where is the Love, Lovestone, Like I Love You, Bye Bye Bye, It's Gonna Be Me, Girlfriend
Regine*Live! Concert Video. On The Wings Of Love, Don't Say You Love Me, I Don't Wanna Wait, I Knew I Loved You, You're The Inspiration, Till They Take My Heart Away, This I Promise You, Dancing Queen/Dance With Me, Burn, Eternal Flame, Through The Fire, Chanage The World, Fallin, I'll Be Over You, Kailangan Ko'y Ikaw, I Don't Wanna Miss A Thing, What A Girl Wants, On Ne Sa'imera. Speacial features: Discography and Photo Gallery
ORIGINAL CDs
AS ONE ALL-STAR DUETS COLLECTION - Nandito Ako (Sharon Cuneta & Ogie Alcasid), Tell Me (Regine Velasquez & Ariel Rivera), I Don't Love You Anymore (Lea Salonga & Ariel Rivera) et. al. 150.00
BARBRA STREISAND What Matters Most 200.00
GEORGE CANSECO Masterpieces Piano Collection 75.00
GLORIA ESTEFAN The Standards 200.00
MUSIC FOR BABIES Filipino Edition - Sa Ugoy ng Duyan, Ili Ili Tulog Anay, Mamang Sorbetero, Sarungbanggi etc. 150.00
NORA AUNOR Superstar ng Buhay Ko 75.00
PAUL ANKA Duets - Walk a Fine Line (Michael McDonald & George Benson), This is It (Michael Jackson), It's Hard to Say Goodbye (Celine Dion), My Way (Frank Sinatra) et. al. 200.00
PAUL POTTS Passione 200.00
PAUL POTTS One Chance with DVD 250.00
THE POWER OF LOVE THE BEST OF JENNIFER RUSH 150.00
THE PRIEST 200.00
THE PRIEST Harmony 200.00
RUSSELL WATSON La Voce 200.00
SPARKLE ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK 200.00
FILM BOOKS
Best American Movie Writing 1998. George Plimpton, Php150.00
Movie Book, The Phaidon Press Limited, P1,200.00
1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die: 5th Anniversary Edition. Stephen Jay Schneide, Php 600.00
POCKETBOOKS
Fifty Shades Darker. El James Php 350.00
Fifty Shades Freed. El James Php 350.00
Like Water for Chocolate. Laura Esquivel, Php 175.00
Richard III. William Shakespeare, Php 80.00
Romeo and Juliet. William Shakespeare Php 80.00
Sense and Sensibility Jane Austen, PhP 200.00
Toxicology, Jessica Hagedorn, PhP 350.00
Bad Seed, The (1956) Can evil be inherited? That's the question posed by Maxwell Anderson in his stage play The Bad Seed. This 1956 film adaptation stars many actors from the Broadway version, including Nancy Kelly, Patty McCormack, Henry Jones and Eileen Heckart. Young McCormack plays Rhoda, a too-good-to-be-true grade schooler who occasionally exhibits a vicious streak whenever things don't turn out her way. During a picnic, one of Rhoda's schoolmates is drowned; the victim is a boy who'd won a penmanship medal that Rhoda had coveted. Nancy Kelly, the girl's mother, slowly comes to the horrible conclusion that Rhoda was responsible for the boy's death--a suspicion fueled by the discovery that Kelly, who was adopted as an infant, is the daughter of a convicted murderess. Meanwhile, a moronic handyman (Henry Jones) accidentally tumbles to Rhoda's secret, whereupon he is ""accidentally"" burned to death. Realizing that Rhoda must be stopped before she can kill again, and reasoning that the authorities would never believe the truth, Kelly tries to put the girl to sleep permanently with barbituates, then shoots herself. The play's ironic ending--the mother dies, while the unsuspected Rhoda lives on--is sacrificed for a ""divine retribution"" finale in the film, with Rhoda being punished by a convenient bolt of lightning. This alteration is acceptable, but director Mervin LeRoy further gilds the lily with an asinine closing-credits sequence wherein Nancy Kelly throws Patty McCormack over her knee and administers a spanking! Nominated, 1957 Academy Awards, USA - Oscar Best Actress in a Leading Role (Nancy Kelly), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Eileen Heckart), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Patty McCormack), Best Cinematography; Winner, 1957 Golden Globes, USA - Golden Globe Best Supporting Actress (Eileen Heckart). Nominated, Golden Globe Best Supporting Actress (Patty McCormack)
Blue Is the Warmest Color (2013) The colorful, electrifying romance that took the Cannes Film Festival by storm courageously dives into a young womans experiences of first love and sexual awakening. Blue Is the Warmest Color stars the remarkable newcomer Adèle Exarchopoulos as a high schooler who, much to her own surprise, plunges into a thrilling relationship with a female twentysomething art student, played by Léa Seydoux. Directed by Abdellatif Kechiche, this finely detailed, intimate epic sensitively renders the erotic abandon of youth. It has captivated international audiences and been widely embraced as a defining love story for the new century. (www.criterion.com) Winner, 2013 Cannes Film Festival - FIPRESCI Prize Competition, Palme d'Or Shared with: Adèle Exarchopoulos (actress), Léa Seydoux (actress) For the first time ever the prize was also officially awarded to two of the actors.
Death in Venice (Morte a Venezia) (1971) Based on a novel by Thomas Mann, Death in Venice stars Dirk Bogarde as a German composer who is terrified that he has lost all vestiges of humanity. While visiting Venice, Bogarde falls in love with a beautiful young boy (Bjorn Andresen). The relationship is ruined by Bogarde's obsession with the boy's youth and physical perfection; the composer realizes that the child represents an ideal that he can never match. The character played by Dirk Bogarde is evidently intended to be Gustav Mahler, whose haunting music is featured on the film's soundtrack. (www.allrovi.com) Nominated, 1972 Academy Awards, USA - Oscar Best Costume Design; Winner, 1971 Cannes Film Festival -25th Anniversary Prize. Nominated - Palme d'Or; Winner, 1971 Golden Globes, Italy - Golden Globe Best Film
Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles (Qian li zou dan qi) (2005) On the heels of such extravagant historical swordplay epics as Hero and House of Flying Daggers, Mainland Chinese director Zhang Yimou returns to the reins to tell this intimate tale of an aging father who attempts to remedy a longstanding rift with his grown son. Summoned to Tokyo by his daughter-in-law, Rie (Shinobu Terajima), village fisherman Gou-ichi Takata (Ken Takakura), arrives at a city hospital to find his son, Ken-ichi (Kiichi Nakai), bedridden by liver cancer. Though Gou-ichi attempts to use the visit as a catalyst to heal a decade-long dispute between the pair, stubborn Ken-ichi rejects his father's attempt at reconciliation outright. Subsequently handed a videotape by Rie before departing back to the countryside, Gou-ichi returns home unsuccessful in his efforts to build a bridge of peace between himself and his ailing son. Upon watching the videotape, a research project exploring the Chinese folk arts that was shot by Ken-ichi in the Southern province of Yunnan, Gou-ichi is oddly affected by the onscreen failure of his son in convincing well-known opera singer Li Jiamin (playing himself) to perform the titular song, a classic operatic piece espousing the values of friendship. Now determined to travel to Yunnan and videotape the performance that his son could not, Gou-ichi embarks on a life-changing quest that will not only give him a greater understanding of the relationship between himself and his own son, but set into motion a healing process that will also have a profound impact on the troubled opera singer and the man's long-lost illegitimate son as well. Winner, 2007 Hong Kong Film Awards - Hong Kong Film Award Best Asian Film (China); Winner, 2006 San Diego Film Critics Society Awards - SDFCS Award Best Actor (Ken Takakura), Best Foreign-Language Film
Son of Man (2006) The story of the life and death of Jesus Christ gets a new (and strongly politicized) retelling in a powerful drama from Africa. Mary (Pauline Malefane) is seeking shelter in a schoolhouse during a skirmish in the midst of a bloody civil war when she is visited by an angel of the Lord, who tells her that she will give birth to the son of God. Mary raises Jesus (Andile Kosi) until he grows to adulthood; he then sets out on his own, preaching a new faith which embraces compassion and non-violence while rejecting the corruption and brutality of the current political leadership. Jesus' teachings attract a handful of disciples ranging in age, background, and gender, but as a military occupation force takes over the land, the actions of those who oppose their authority are monitored closely by the new government, and Jesus and his associates are no exception. While intelligence agents regard Jesus as subversive but harmless, one of his disciples, Judas (Jim Hgxabaze), secretly meets with the authorities and convinces them the mysterious miracle worker is up to no good. (www.allrovi.com) Nominated, 2006 Sundance Film Festival -Grand Jury Prize World Cinema - Dramatic
Soong Sisters, The (Song jia huang chao)*(1997) At the turn of the 20th century, the three Soong sisters married three of the most influential figures in the history of China. Watch the sisters journey from their college years in America to their lives with the men who shaped modern China. (www.amazon.com) Winner, 1998 Hong Kong Film Awards - Hong Kong Film Award Best Actress (Maggie Cheung), Best Supporting Actor (Wen Jiang), Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction, Best Costume & Make Up Design, Best Original Film Score. Nominated - Hong Kong Film Award Best Picture, Best Director
Taste of Cherry (Ta'm e guilass )(1997) Iranian auteur Abbas Kiarostamis Taste of Cherry is an emotionally complex meditation on life and death. Middle-aged Mr. Badii (Homayoun Ershadi) drives through the hilly outskirts of Tehransearching for someone to rescue or bury him. (www.criterion.com) Winner,1997 Cannes Film Festival - Palme d'Or Tied with The Eel (1997). Winner, 1009 Society of Film Critics Awards, USA -NSFC Award Best Foreign Language Film
VCD
Breaking the Silence (Piao liang ma ma) (2000) Gong Li stars in this low-key drama about a single mother who will do anything to provide for her son. Sun Liying (Li) struggles to care for her hearing-impaired child Zheng Da (Gao Xin) after her taxi driver husband divorces her. After Zheng Da gets his hearing aid smashed in a fight with classmates, Sun Liying sets out to raise 5,000 yuan (a small fortune) to buy him a replacement. A friend helps her set up an unauthorized bookstall, which soon gets raided by the police. Later she splits her time delivering newspapers and cleaning house for a rich businessman. 2000 Golden Rooster Awards - Best Actress (Li Gong); 2000 Hawaii International Film Festival - Netpac Award; 2000 Montréal World Film Festival - Best Actress. Tied with Isabelle Huppert for Merci pour le chocolat (2000).
Others, The (2001) Spanish filmmaker Alejandro Amenabar's first English-language production is a creepy period ghost story that continues in the vein of his earlier art house hit Open Your Eyes (1997). Nicole Kidman stars as Grace, a devoutly religious mother of two ailing children who has moved with her family to a mansion on the English coast while awaiting her husband's return from World War II, though he has been declared missing. Their children, Anne (Alakina Mann) and Nicholas (James Bentley), both suffer from a rare photosensitivity disease that renders them extremely vulnerable to sunlight, prompting Grace's rule of having only one door open in the house at a time. When Anne begins claiming to see ghosts, Grace at first believes her newly arrived family of eccentric servants to be responsible, but chilling events and visions soon lead her to believe that something supernatural is indeed going on. (www.allmovie.com) Winner, 2001 Flanders International Film Festival - FIPRESCI Prize (Alejandro Amenábar For brilliantly resurrecting a classic genre, through a writer-director-composer's deeply haunting vision of light and darkness. Winner, 2002 Goya Awards - Goya Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Editing, Best Film, Best Production Design, Best Production Supervision, Best Screenplay - Original, Best Sound; Winner, 2001 Flanders International Film Festival - FIPRESCI Prize (Alejandro Amenábar For brilliantly resurrecting a classic genre, through a writer-director-composer's deeply haunting vision of light and darkness. Nominated, Grand Prix; Nominated, 2002 Golden Globes, USA - Golden Globe Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama (Nicole Kidman); Nominated, 2001 Venice Film Festival - Golden Lion
CONCERTS:
Justin Bieber 2011 EP Never Say Never The Remixes Includes Never Say Never, That Should Be Me, Somebody to Love, Up, Overboard, Born to be Somebody, Baby, Stuck in the Moment, Eenie Meenie, Kiss and Tell, One Less Lonely Girl, Love Me, One Time. Bonus: justin Timberlake's MTV - Sexy Back, Cry Me a River, Señorita, Like i Love you, Work It, Rocky your Body, My Love, Rehab, What Goes Around Comes Around, Give It to Me, Cry Me a River, Signs, Where is the Love, Lovestone, Like I Love You, Bye Bye Bye, It's Gonna Be Me, Girlfriend
Regine*Live! Concert Video. On The Wings Of Love, Don't Say You Love Me, I Don't Wanna Wait, I Knew I Loved You, You're The Inspiration, Till They Take My Heart Away, This I Promise You, Dancing Queen/Dance With Me, Burn, Eternal Flame, Through The Fire, Chanage The World, Fallin, I'll Be Over You, Kailangan Ko'y Ikaw, I Don't Wanna Miss A Thing, What A Girl Wants, On Ne Sa'imera. Speacial features: Discography and Photo Gallery
ORIGINAL CDs
AS ONE ALL-STAR DUETS COLLECTION - Nandito Ako (Sharon Cuneta & Ogie Alcasid), Tell Me (Regine Velasquez & Ariel Rivera), I Don't Love You Anymore (Lea Salonga & Ariel Rivera) et. al. 150.00
BARBRA STREISAND What Matters Most 200.00
GEORGE CANSECO Masterpieces Piano Collection 75.00
GLORIA ESTEFAN The Standards 200.00
MUSIC FOR BABIES Filipino Edition - Sa Ugoy ng Duyan, Ili Ili Tulog Anay, Mamang Sorbetero, Sarungbanggi etc. 150.00
NORA AUNOR Superstar ng Buhay Ko 75.00
PAUL ANKA Duets - Walk a Fine Line (Michael McDonald & George Benson), This is It (Michael Jackson), It's Hard to Say Goodbye (Celine Dion), My Way (Frank Sinatra) et. al. 200.00
PAUL POTTS Passione 200.00
PAUL POTTS One Chance with DVD 250.00
THE POWER OF LOVE THE BEST OF JENNIFER RUSH 150.00
THE PRIEST 200.00
THE PRIEST Harmony 200.00
RUSSELL WATSON La Voce 200.00
SPARKLE ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK 200.00
FILM BOOKS
Best American Movie Writing 1998. George Plimpton, Php150.00
Movie Book, The Phaidon Press Limited, P1,200.00
1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die: 5th Anniversary Edition. Stephen Jay Schneide, Php 600.00
POCKETBOOKS
Fifty Shades Darker. El James Php 350.00
Fifty Shades Freed. El James Php 350.00
Like Water for Chocolate. Laura Esquivel, Php 175.00
Richard III. William Shakespeare, Php 80.00
Romeo and Juliet. William Shakespeare Php 80.00
Sense and Sensibility Jane Austen, PhP 200.00
Toxicology, Jessica Hagedorn, PhP 350.00