July 23, 2025
19-year old Sunshine Francisco (Maris Racal) had been a serious rhythmic gymnast for 9 years already. She had been successful in local and international tournaments, so she had a legion of admirers. She had daily training sessions with her coach (Merylle Soriano), as the Olympic team qualifying competition was coming up in three months. One afternoon, she collapsed in the middle of her ribbon routine. Her worst fear was confirmed by a test kit.
A Filipino film about a woman contemplating abortion for an unexpected pregnancy is bound to be controversial. During the 18th Cinemalaya Filmfest, "12 Weeks" (2022) by Anna Isabelle Matutina told the story of Alice (Max Eigenmann), a 40 year-old journalist whose unexpected pregnancy in middle age shook her self-confidence, so she thought of aborting it. (I'm not sure if Matutina's nickname Sunshine somehow inspired the title of this new film.)
Now if that film raised eyebrows, what more this new film? Here, veteran director Antonette Jadaone that told the story of Sunshine, a teenager who naively engaged in unprotected sex with her boyfriend Miggy (Elijah Canlas). He was the first person she told about her predicament, and the creep just hastily ordered her to get rid of it, with no remorse nor compassion, leaving her all alone to solve her problem herself, in the streets of Quiapo.
Sunshine lived in a small house in a poor neighborhood, with her elder sister (Jennica Garcia) who was struggling to raise an infant on her own. The circumstances why their situation was like this was never even brought up. It was enough to know that Sunshine knew how much sacrifice it entailed to be a young mother without a responsible partner. Sunshine certainly knew she did not want this baby, and missing the Olympics team was not the only reason.
If her coach (Meryll Soriano) knew the truth, Sunshine knew she would be out of the national team outright. Her BFF Thea (Xyriel Manabat) chose to obey her mother's close-minded instructions to abandon her friend. However, Sunshine did have someone playing devil's advocate and external conscience for her. There was this mysterious unnamed little girl (Annika Co) who randomly appeared to argue against Sunshine's decisions.
This film did not shirk from showing the harrowing consequences of attempting an abortion. It showed how desperate girls blindly trust shady pills bought from a street vendor, or a neighborhood "hilot" with questionable unsterile techniques, not knowing how it could cause severe complications that could bring them to the brink of death. Then, they have to face judgmental and sanctimonious doctors (like Dra. Asuncion played by Madeleine Nicolas) who deride them for being rash and immoral.
It all boils down to a woman's right to have agency over her own body, not anyone else. And as long as abortion remained illegal, women with unwanted pregnancies have to resort to medically-unsafe ways of getting rid of the fetus, putting their lives in danger. However, no matter how this film ends, abortion will always be a contentious issue that will probably not gain much traction in ultra-conservative, predominantly Catholic Philippine society any time soon. It certainly took chutzpah for these filmmakers to produce a film like this.
That said, the film was very well-made, with excellent camera work by cinematographer by Pao Orendain and that suspenseful musical score by Rico Blanco. In the titular role, Maris Racal gives a performance with grit and honesty well outside her usual comfort zone. Her ribbon routines look very authentic, thanks to editor Benjamin Tolentino. Garcia, Co and Rhed Bustamante (as pregnant 13 year-old Mary Grace) gave strong supporting turns. 8/10