A young Filipina searches for the missing links between her strange bleeding condition and her faraway mother's healing powers.A young Filipina searches for the missing links between her strange bleeding condition and her faraway mother's healing powers.A young Filipina searches for the missing links between her strange bleeding condition and her faraway mother's healing powers.
- Awards
- 9 wins & 17 nominations total
Hasmine Killip
- Teresa
- (as Hasmine Kilip)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Psychic surgery and faith healing. Not your everyday topic in the movies. This film is exuberant. For better or worse. There is an intoxicating dramaturgical and emotional magic that lasts all the way through. The multilingualism adds a lot. But not the music. It becomes a burden.
Still, the film puts me in a mood, a delirium tremens kind of condition, that is difficult to interpret. Kind of like psychic surgery. Harmful or healthy?
Still, the film puts me in a mood, a delirium tremens kind of condition, that is difficult to interpret. Kind of like psychic surgery. Harmful or healthy?
What did I just watch?! A total waste of my time. Absolutely pointless and the main character was so unappealing. 2hrs of pure nothing. I can't believe I actually watched this to the very end and to even think it wasn't in English and you have to read subtitles for 2 hrs only for nothing to happen? This is so bad.
There was no build up, there was no plot, there was no backstory, there was really nothing going with this movie. I still wonder what was holy about her and why it was even titled that.
I wouldn't recommend this for anyone, not even my worst enemy. Complete waste of time. Total waste of time.
There was no build up, there was no plot, there was no backstory, there was really nothing going with this movie. I still wonder what was holy about her and why it was even titled that.
I wouldn't recommend this for anyone, not even my worst enemy. Complete waste of time. Total waste of time.
Fusing genres can yield captivating stories and even more intriguing films. But getting the mix right is tricky business. Like a chef specializing in fusion cuisine, a filmmaker attempting something comparable must carefully combine elements to get the perfect amount of each in his/her cinematic recipe. Unfortunately, that's where the debut feature from writer-director Araceli Lemos goes off the rails. This story of two adolescent Filipino sisters living on their own in Greece after their mother returns home follows the divergent paths they each follow when it comes to forging their own lives, especially in their respective religious/spiritual paths. However, in an ambitious attempt to combine a coming of age tale with one infused with fundamentalist religion, alternative spirituality and alleged horror themes, the filmmaker can't quite figure out where the story should go, what to emphasize or what to include/exclude. While some of this might be conveniently attributed to the coming of age time of life being an inherently confusing one, that seems like pale cover for a narrative that simply tries to incorporate too much and doesn't combine its various aspects in a coherent, focused screenplay. To be sure, the effort to try something different with these genres (especially as a fusion) is to be commended, but the result just doesn't quite cut it in the end. Viewers are likely to end up frustrated that the picture doesn't serve up the kind of fare that could have made this a compelling watch in more skillful and experienced hands. For now, though, audiences will have to settle for one of those "what might have been" offerings.
The film is good, the direction competent, the performances excellent, but to believe that a baby is born with a fishbone in its esophagus is asking a lot of credulity from the spectator. This kind of movie that endorses this kind of irrational belief does humanity a disservice. Ladies and gentlemen: This is a fraud. There are no such "psychic powers".
Here in Brazil, several of these healers have been unmasked, the most famous of them, Zé Arigó did the same type of "spiritual operation" that the character does in the film. This is fraud. And not to show that in the movie is to prove a fraud.
Here in Brazil, several of these healers have been unmasked, the most famous of them, Zé Arigó did the same type of "spiritual operation" that the character does in the film. This is fraud. And not to show that in the movie is to prove a fraud.
I thought it was a girl's mind like hummingbird. I didn't expect it to be completely different. Girls shed blood, religious rituals, baby sacrifices, and tell the growth history of a pair of girls in a way close to cut films. Coupled with the identity of immigrants, it is worth pondering.
- How long is Holy Emy?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 51 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1
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