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Manny Pacquiao
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Boiled rice and fish guts: Manny Pacquiao’s rags to riches tale hits silver screen

New movie depicts the Pacman's childhood, when he scrambled for pennies

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Buboy Villar, the 17-year-old actor playing Manny Pacquiao in the movie, 'Kid Kulafu'. Photo: AP

As a dirt-poor rookie boxer in the southern Philippines, Manny Pacquiao started his phenomenal rise to global fame not as the Pacman, as he is sometimes called, but as "Kid Kulafu".

That moniker - the title of a new local film about Pacquiao's childhood - was taken from the label of a cheap wine whose empty bottles he returned for recycling to earn money to help his family.

Kid Kulafu opened on Wednesday in more than 70 theatres across the Philippines starting ahead of Pacquiao's May 2 megafight with Floyd Mayweather. It will be shown in some US and Canadian theatres from Friday.

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Produced with advice and assistance from Pacquiao, the film depicts the impoverished world he grew up in well before he became the world's only eight-division boxing champion, one of its highest-paid athletes and the wealthiest member of the Philippine House of Representatives.

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"He had every excuse in the book to fail - broken family, no food, no home, nowhere to go, no money, but he still persevered, and that's what I want the people to see - that he is where he is today because of hard work," filmmaker Paul Soriano said.

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