Mano Po (Filipino film series)


The Mano Po anthology—produced by Regal Entertainment—is one of the most successful film series produced in the history of Philippine cinema, second only to Shake, Rattle & Roll ←. The series has now seven productions and also includes Ako Legal Wife and Bahay Kubo . All episodes are directed by Joel Lamangan, with the exception of Mano Po 2 which was helmed by Erik Matti and Mano Po 7: Tsinoy which was helmed by Ian Loreños. The seven series focuses on the ways and traditions of the Chinese-Filipino community
Mano Po 8: My Great Love.
Another tradition for the cast and crew of the Mano Po series is the visit of several cities in China, including Great Wall of China, Forbidden City in Beijing , and Shanghai; and also in Bangkok, Thailand

List of Series

Mano Po 1: My Family (2002)

Starring: Maricel Soriano, Kris Aquino, Richard Gomez, Ara Mina, Eddie Garcia
Regal Entertainment produced the first Mano Po episode, known also as Mano Po 1: My Family. The film won 12 MMFF awards including Best Picture. The story revolves around a Chinese immigrant Don Luis Go whom at the young age left China to be with his Filipino wife Elisa. They had 2 children Daniel and Linda. The Go family had 3 granddaughters Vera the eldest and heiress to the Go family business, Juliet and Richelle, the youngest and the blacksheep of the family.

Mano Po 2: My Home (2003)

Starring: Susan Roces, Christopher de Leon, Lorna Tolentino, Kris Aquino, Zsa Zsa Padilla, Judy Ann Santos, Richard Gutierrez, Jay Manalo
Antonio Chan, a prominent Chinese businessman, has three women in his life: Sol, a Filipina; Lu Shui, a Chinese; and Belinda, a Filipino-Chinese. Antonio has children with all three women. A crisis shakes up the over-extended Tsinoy family prompting all the members to re-examine their values, their relationships, and confront issues that they have refused to face all these years. With Mano Po 2, My Home, Regal Entertainment continues the tradition established by the critical and box-office hit Mano Po. Features strong dramatic performances from a stellar ensemble cast, lush visuals, a reverberating musical score, an unforgettable theme song, and a heart-warming screenplay that eloquently captures the rich Tsinoy culture. Laugh, cry, and be touched by this family story about forgiveness, healing and undying love.

Mano Po 3: My Love (2004)

Starring: Vilma Santos, Christopher de Leon, Jay Manalo, Angel Locsin, Angelica Panganiban, Dennis Trillo, Eddie Garcia, Jean Garcia
The third episode marks the appearance of Vilma Santos as Lilia Chiong-Yang, an anti-crime crusader who was romantically torn between Michael and Paul. This film won the 2011 Metro Manila Film Festival Best Picture Award. Santos won the best actress award in the said filmfest.
Produced by Regal's sister production MAQ Productions, Mano Po III marks the return of Joel Lamangan as the series' director. Lamangan, however, lost to Cesar Montano for winning the Best Director Award in the 2011 Metro Manila Film Festival.

Mano Po 4: Ako Legal Wife (2005)

Starring: Zsa Zsa Padilla, Rufa Mae Quinto, Cherry Pie Picache, Jay Manalo
This comedy—popularly claimed as Mano Po 4 -- focuses on concubinage. Zsa Zsa Padilla won the best actress award in the 2005 Metro Manila Film Festival. It is revealed that this movie is officially called "Mano Po 4" after the release of Mano Po 5 due to the return of Padilla since "My Home".

Mano Po 5: Gua Ai Di (2006)

Starring: Angel Locsin, Richard Gutierrez, Lorna Tolentino
This series is more of a romantic comedy-drama rather than the earlier ones which center around serious drama. However, Angel Locsin's appearance as the leading role for this film is her last project with Regal Entertainment followed by her transfer to ABS-CBN a year later. "Gua ai di" is also translated to "I love you" from the Chinese dialect called Hokkien, also known as Fukien in the Philippines.

Mano Po 6: A Mother's Love (2009)

Starring: Sharon Cuneta, Christopher de Leon, Dennis Trillo, Heart Evangelista
The new tale marks the first project of Sharon Cuneta under Regal Films. This is also a reunion movie for Cuneta with Joel Lamangan and Christopher de Leon.
The dramatic story focuses on billionaire Melinda Uy, who had a rags-to-riches story of hardships and triumphs as a Chinese-Filipino blooded woman.

Mano Po 7: Tsinoy (2016)

Starring: Richard Yap, Jean Garcia, Enchong Dee
The story focuses on relationship and modern generation of Tsinoys. The film started Richard Yap making him the first male lead protagonist in the entire series.

Mano Po 8: My Great Love (2020)

Recurring Actors

Spin-offs