Mapupulang Rosas - Taurus Films 2002 Pmh01-31-4... Upd
Moreover, the catalog string PMH01-31-4 has become an among Filipino film geeks, akin to the “Cursed Tapes” of the Sinister movies. Typing the code into search engines yields nothing but ghostly echoes—forum threads asking, “May nanonood nito? (Anyone seen this?)”
This string resembles the formatting of a , a bootleg DVD catalog number , or a private archival code rather than a mainstream theatrical release. Taurus Films (also known as Taurus Entertainment) was active during the 1980s–1990s producing adult-oriented and action movies. By 2002, the company had largely ceased mainstream production.
likely refers to a specific media catalog or license number, as it is often associated with the film's registration or distribution records. Letterboxd Film Overview Mapupulang Rosas (English: Release Date: September 20, 2002 Angelito J. De Guzman Production Company: Taurus Films International Action / Drama 1 hour 44 minutes Filipino / Tagalog MAPUPULANG ROSAS - Taurus Films 2002 PMH01-31-4...
The plot follows five young women from vastly different backgrounds who are recruited for a high-stakes anti-terrorist mission. They must set aside their personal differences and past concerns to work as a team and prevent terrorists from destroying an entire town. Critics and viewers have noted that the film follows a "female-led action" trope similar to Charlie's Angels
Analyze how the film’s "anti-terror mission" plot reflected global and local anxieties of the early 2000s. Moreover, the catalog string PMH01-31-4 has become an
Without archival materials, we can infer from Taurus’s 2001–2002 roster:
If you own a VHS or a digital copy, you hold a piece of cinematic ephemera that multiple collectors would trade a dozen red roses to see. Until then, the film exists only in the space between search results and speculation: a ghost title waiting for its final reel to be found. Taurus Films (also known as Taurus Entertainment) was
However, after the 1995 MTRCB crackdown on “soft-core” excesses, Taurus pivoted to straight-to-VHS releases. By 2002, the company was primarily licensing its backlog to home video distributors. Mapupulang Rosas likely belonged to this final batch—possibly a re-edit of an earlier film retitled to capitalize on the rosas (rose) trope common in Filipino melodrama.