SHE’S
ANGRY: In ‘Sisa,’ The Women Lose Their Shit
Female
rage is the heart of this revenge drama, but is it enough to fuel the entire
movie?
By Mel
Wang
March
05, 2026
Sisa
is an all-women affair.
Director
Jun Robles Lana’s historical thriller, set in the final days of the
Philippine-American War, features a notable lack of men among the major
ensemble. Yes, male American soldiers patrol the village they’ve turned into
their headquarters, and yes, male commanders with their male Filipino rebel
counterparts call the shots when it comes to deciding the war’s outcome. But
their military machismo largely unfolds on the periphery, and it’s nowhere near
as compelling as the intrigue stirred up by the women of the village.
The
women of Sisa have their own problems to think about. Delia (Eugene Domingo) is
busy fretting over her 13-year old daughter Nena (Angellie Sanoy), who’s
spending too much time with a young, trigger-happy American soldier. Ofelia
(Tanya Gomez) can barely leave her bed after the capture of her husband, the
village leader. And they, along with the other women of the village, are united
in their distaste for the young widow Leonor (Jennica Garcia), who spends her
evenings warming the bed of Commander Harrison (Kuya Manzano) — allegedly.
Sharp glares, side-eyes, and well-timed sarcasm all color how the women make
their dislike known, and it is a delight to watch them bicker and squabble as a
way of distracting themselves from their shared grief.
Things
change when a seemingly deranged woman (Hilda Koronel) wanders into town. They
immediately welcome her into their fold, naming her Sisa after the madwoman of
Noli Me Tangere (a little on-the-nose there, ladies, but alright). Quiet,
stoic, and prone to bursts of anger, Sisa is quickly labelled the town lunatic
and left to her own devices. But underneath her guise of madness, Sisa’s out
for revenge, and she’ll stop at nothing to get even with the Americans who
ruined her and her family’s lives.
Focus
on the Rage
There’s
no denying that Koronel is a formidable actress, even after 14 years away from
the silver screen. Her movies with the late National Artist for Film Lino
Brocka firmly planted her in the national spotlight, from Tinimbang Ka Ngunit
Kulang, to Maynila sa mga Kuko ng Liwanag, to Insiang. And in Sisa, she does
not disappoint. With far less dialogue than her female co-stars, Koronel
infuses her stares and body language with a rage so great that it’s a wonder
that no one realizes what Sisa is up to. Whether she’s visibly shaking as she
walks by the American soldiers or frowning at Leonor as she claims, for the nth
time, that the Americans are good, Sisa’s definitely seething over how the
Filipino people have traded one violent colonizer for another.
But
while Sisa’s trying to keep her rage in check, the same cannot be said for the
women around her. Domingo, in particular, excels at portraying a mother just
one push away from a downward spiral. A skilled actress in both comedy and
drama, Domingo doesn’t shy away from throwing shade, sobbing, and threatening
murder, sometimes all in the same breath. Delia may start off quietly grumbling
about how the Americans took everything from her family, but when the last push
inevitably comes, we can’t fault Delia for finally picking up an axe.
Sisa
is at its best when it’s shining a light on female rage, but these moments are,
unfortunately, too few and far between. Instead, we get the usual narrative of
Filipinos versus colonizers, when the real and more compelling threats come
from within. We already know that the American soldiers do not have the
Filipinos’ best interests at heart, and we already know that the war doesn’t
end in the Philippines’ favor. So it is the in-fighting and the intrigue that
keep us watching Sisa, because we do not yet know how things will end for this
one particular group of angry Filipino women.
But do
these women get what they want in the end? By the time the final act comes
around, most, if not all, of them, are looking for some form of retribution. As
a director, Lana has laid more than enough pieces of their stories down to show
that they are no longer satisfied living under a new colonizer’s regime. All he
needs to do is complete their arcs in a finale that he’s carefully spent the
last two hours building towards.
And
Lana grants us this pay-off, albeit not with any grand, final showdown. Just
like his past dramas (most notably Mga Kuwentong Barbero, which also features
Domingo as a grieving, spiraling woman), Lana ensures that each of his main
ensemble cast members gets the vengeance they long for, regardless of the
consequences.
If
Lana’s goal was to create a historical thriller with female rage at its core,
Sisa more than delivers. It leaves no easy messages or morals with its
audiences by the time the end credits roll, and it asks us only to consider how
far is too far when faced with a tempting chance at revenge.
Rolling
Stone Philippines: In ‘Sisa,’ The Women Lose Their Shit - https://rollingstonephilippines.com/culture/philippine-cinema/sisa-hilda-koronel-movie-review/
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