Sisa
(2025) by Jun Robles Lana Film Review
Instead
of a genre movie, we got a historical lesson and a political pamphlet
Marko
Stojiljković
November
26, 2025
For a
movie to defy the expectations is not always easy. Sometimes the reason for
that lays in our own inability to disregard them in order to approach the film
in an honest, fair and square way. Reviewers bear some power and responsibility
that comes with it, but we’re all humans after all. In that regard, marketing
and PR come as powerful, but ultimately a dangerous tool – if used in a wrong
way, it backfires and does the damage.
Case
in point: Jun Robles Lana’s newest film “Sisa” that has just premiered at the
official competition of Black Nights Film Festival in Tallinn, Estonia. Sold as
a war movie and a revenge thriller set just after the American takeover of the
Philippines from the Spanish, it turns out to be something else entirely, and
not in a good way.
That
should be clear from the get-go, since the filmmaker opens the film with a
series of info-cards that give us a politicized historical lesson on a pretense
of providing some context. The theme is the American occupation of the
archipelago in 1899 following the war with the Spanish who ruled the islands
for the previous three centuries. Americans have established a reign of terror,
executing hundreds of thousands of men and putting women and children in
concentration camps. While there were still some fighters trying to resist to
the new colonial oppressor from the jungle, the fear of revenge was great and
the rest of the population suffered. (At this place, one can’t help asking a
question whether the previous Spanish or the subsequent Japanese occupation
were any better or milder from the Filipino point of view, but let’s not go
down that alley.)
Anyhow,
a nameless and seemingly aimless traumatized woman (Hilda Koronel) walks into
the fenced village going straight to the guard tower without saying a word. The
American soldiers are about to shoot her, but the women from the village beg
them to spare her life. The woman does not remember her own name, but gets a
new one, Sisa, after a crazed character from a popular book. Simmering with
anger that could explode to rage and fury, Sisa observes the proceedings in the
village: the openly racist attitude from the camp military commander and the
condescending one from the teacher (Isabel Lamers), the pedophilia from the
soldiers, the different survival tactics adopted by the different women in the
village, from open defiance to accepting the role of the concubines in order to
make something for themselves, which almost always results in rivalry and
conflict among them.
Given
that the men coming to the village to trade goods or to pass the message are no
less opportunistic and abusive, one might wonder not if, but when will the
titular character lead the rebellion against the cruelty world. Alas, that does
not happen, so, instead of a genre movie that we are promised, we get two hours
of thinly veiled historical lesson from a raging anti-colonial and
pretend-feminist perspective garnished with a dose of torture porn to make a
point. Basically, a pamphlet.
The
acting is underwhelming throughout, given that the cast members usually deliver
some rigidly written lines in an amateurish way with more or less theatrics.
One noble exception is Hilda Koronel, whose character rarely speaks, so the
actress has to use her facial expressions and posture as tool more often, which
she does quite well. The same applies to Isabel Lamers, who has enough
experience and instinct to make something out of her character. The choice of
the actors to play the American soldiers is quite questionable, as it seems
that it consists of amateurs that never acted for camera before, although it
might be a deliberate statement.
From
such a modestly budgeted movie, no one could expect some high production
values, but the production design is basic rather than minimalist and the
costumes seem lifted directly from a local theater troupe. Some saving grace
might be found in Carlo Mendoza’s cinematography, but not for the reason of the
cinematography itself, but simply coming from the outdoor locations that could
pose as the scenery from a western, adventure or a war movie.
“Sisa”
is a highly underwhelming experience, but what frustrates the most is that
there was the way for it not to be the case, and that way was pretty obvious.
Even on a shoestring budget, adopting a genre approach of a war action movie or
a period-set revenge thriller flick would result in a better movie and in a
vehicle that could deliver the message in a way that is both more elegant and
more loud. It had the character, it had the setting, but its filmmaker might
have lacked both courage and skill to do so.
Asian Movie
Pulse: Sisa (2025) by Jun Robles Lana Film Review - https://asianmoviepulse.com/2025/11/sisa-2025-by-jun-robles-lana-film-review/
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