Senior Year (film)


Senior Year is a 2010 Philippine coming-of-age film written, scored, edited and directed by Jerrold Tarog. It follows ten students of a private Catholic school in Manila, as they go through the many transitions that come with their final year in high school.

Plot

The promotional material for Senior Year avoids giving the audience specific plot points, and describes the film simply as:

Cast

Students

Casting and screenplay

To cast the film, Tarog sent surveys to about 300 students about their life experiences. The ten students with the most interesting stories were selected to be part of the cast. Tarog then put these students through a two-month workshop, and then he started writing the screenplay for Senior Year.
"Kung anuman yung kwento ng buhay nila, dun ako na-inspire na magsulat ng script", Tarog would later explain.

Promotion

Faculty: A Prequel to Senior Year

In 2010, as Senior Year was being made, the ABS CBN News Channel tapped Tarog to be part of AmBisyon 2010, a series in which directors would use short films to narratively present the various problems that would face whoever won the Presidency in the Philippine Presidential Election of 2010. Tarog's entry, covering the area of "education", was the short film "Faculty", subtitled "A prequel to Senior Year." The Ms. Joan character from Senior Year makes her first appearance in this short, which explains why the character, who used to be a College teacher, had become a high school teacher by the time she was shown in Senior Year. Faculty became a viral hit on various social networks, and the popularity of the short film became part of the marketing for its longer, more fleshed-out sequel.

Digitank Studios, 2010 Metro Manila Filmfest, and SM Cinemas

During the development of the film, Tarog, who up to this point had been known primarily as an independent film director, told producer Franco Alido that he would "do my best to come up with a film that he can show to everybody. But he has to do his best to show it to everybody." He further explained that "Any film that has commercial aspirations is nothing without the marketing that comes after it. People have to know the film is out there, that it wants to be seen. And that's exponentially more difficult for an independent film without big stars, huge billboards and full support from the major TV networks."
Alido and his Digitank Studios staff proceeded to do everything they could to promote the film, lugging promotional material and viewing equipment to different SM branches and eventually getting the film played in twelve SM Cinema Branches beginning March 9, while a nonconventional promotional campaign used Facebook and YouTube to build hype for the film, often taking advantage of the fact that the prequel short film, "Faculty", had become a viral favorite on social networking sites. As of the day before the regular screening, the campaign had attracted more than twelve thousand to the movie's official Facebook page.
The film was first screened as an independent film during the 2010 Metro Manila Film Festival, which began a special category for indie films that year.
It was later picked up for distribution in SM Cinemas and had its wider-audience premiere on March 2, 2011, and began its regular screening run on March 9.

SM Cinema extension campaign goes viral

On the evening of the film's release, Tarog thanked those who had already seen the film and also encouraged those who hadn't seen it yet to watch the film as soon as possible.
On March 10, 2011, with viewers asking on the various social networks for the film to be extended, the film's marketing team replied "We notice some of your pleas are addressed to SM Cinema. Well, you can tell it to them directly. Just Like their FB page and post on their Wall. It could work."
Fans immediately started posting requests on the official SM Cinema wall so that the film would be extended, with the page soon becoming flooded with Senior Year requests. Theater patrons from areas where the SM Cinema branch wasn't showing Senior Year, such as Baguio, Laguna, and Batangas, also requested that the film be shown in their local SM Cinemas.
The campaign worked, and the film was screened in SM Cinemas for an entire week, an unusual achievement for a Filipino independent film. In a message to viewers after the screenings, Tarog noted:
In addition, Tarog noted:

Recognition

The film received an "A" rating from the Philippines' Cinema Evaluation Board, and was heartily recommended by the Philippines' Department of Education. Aside from marking the film in the public eye as "excellent", an "A" rating from the Cinema Evaluation Board entitles a film to a 100% tax rebate on its box office sales.
The risky move of featuring real high school students in the major roles of the film paid off, with critics praising the young actors for their exceptional performances. The film was nominated for national awards even before its scheduled regular screenings.
The Entertainment Press Society 's 8th Golden Screen Awards, which opens the awards season for films in the Philippines, saw Senior Year nominated for six awards, including Best Motion Picture Drama, Best Director, Best Story, and Best Original Screenplay.
The Philippine Movie Press Club 's Star Awards for Movies saw Senior Year nominated for six awards, including Digital Movie Production Designer of the Year for Benjamin Padero, and five nominations for Tarog: Digital Movie Director of the Year, Digital Movie Screenplay of the Year, Digital Movie Editor of the Year, Digital Movie Musical Scorer of the Year,and Digital Movie Sound Engineer of the Year.