Now Showing: Flower Girl Pushes the Envelope with Sue Ramirez

Flower Girl had everyone gagged at its premiere!

Words Mika Reyes
Photos courtesy of CreaZion Studios
June 18, 2025

It was the kind of night where bold storytelling met high fashion, and the air buzzed with anticipation. Flower Girl, the fearless new comedy from The IdeaFirst Company, Octobertrain Films, and CreaZion Studios, had its grand premiere, and to say it was a showstopper would be an understatement. The stars, the press, and Manila’s most discerning influencers—NAIA Black, Dolly De Leon, Chai Fonacier, Hershey Neri, GandangMorenx, Jamie Casiño, Gabby Padilla—gathered, eager to witness the genre-defying spectacle that had everyone talking. And at the heart of the conversation? One name: Poochy.

Sue Ramirez—radiant and effortlessly chic—lit up the carpet alongside co-stars Jameson Blake, Martin del Rosario, Maxie Andreison, Angel Galang, and KaladKaren, while director-writer Fatrick Tabada arrived with a team of proud producers. As cameras flashed and conversations hummed, one thing was certain: Flower Girl wasn’t here to play safe.

Where’d She Go?

Once inside the theater, the exclusive screening unfolded, delivering chaos, satire, and unexpected emotional depth. The story follows Ena, a woman at the peak of her career as a top sanitary napkin endorser—until an unexpected encounter with a trans-fairy in a restroom turns her world inside out. Just like that—pak!—her vagina? Gone. Snatched. With time ticking against a magical flower that loses petals by the day, Ena embarks on a quest for true love or the risk of losing her femininity forever.

The result? A riotous yet poignant journey of self-discovery, identity struggles, and a quiet rebellion against the ever-watchful gaze of gender norms. But was she found? Did she reclaim what was hers? Well, you’ll have to ask Poochy—and stay for the credits.

Breaking Boundaries with Wit and Wonder

Flower Girl is more than just a comedy; it’s an electrifying fusion of magical realism, razor-sharp humor, and biting social commentary. It fearlessly dismantles expectations, flirts with absurdity, and challenges perceptions about femininity, fluidity, and the ways in which identity is policed.

“It’s not the usual film you see in the cinema,” one guest murmured in the foyer—an understatement, really. It’s a cinematic wild card, daring to ask provocative questions with a smirk, a wink, and a whole lot of heart. Flower Girl gives its cast and creatives the freedom to master a story that defies norms—and in doing so, becomes one of those rare films that truly matter.

Lights, Camera, Poochy—Now Showing

If you haven’t seen Flower Girl yet, ano pa hinihintay mo, teh? The film is now showing in select cinemas nationwide, ready for audiences to dive into its unapologetic, rebellious, and refreshingly original take on gender, power, and selfhood.

For more updates, follow CreaZion Studios on Facebook, X, Instagram, and TikTok or visit creazionstudios.com.

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