Thursday, May 14, 2026

Review of MIDNIGHT GIRLS: Empathy with Entertainers

May 14, 2026



When 20 year-old Wanna (Loisa Andalio) arrived in Nagoya, Japan, she was welcomed by her mother's friend Vicky (Jodi Sta. Maria) who had already been working there for several years. Vicky brought Wanna to a nightclub run by fellow Filipina Mama Charry (Carmi Martin), where she worked as one of the girls who entertained male customers while they drink after work. Vicky introduced the newcomer to her two other friends Paris (Sanya Lopez) and Saki (Jane Oineza), who also advised Wanna about the new job she was about to embark on.

Despite their frequent Facetimes, Vicky had problems with her son Patrick (Zaijian Jaranilla), who was only three when he was left to the care of his grandmother (Shamaine Buencamino). Paris was rekindling her romance with her former boyfriend Genji (Genki Ito) who made a surprise return. Saki was facing issues about her own self-identity, even if she looked cool and confident on the outside. Wanna was adjusting very well to her very new world, until she gets an unexpected visit from her boyfriend back home Danny (Miggy Jimenez).

There is no argument that Jody Sta. Maria is an excellent actress, and she extends her streak of award-worthy portrayals here. Being the eldest sister of their group, Sta. Maria's Vicky projects maturity and responsibility. Her scenes with her regular customers Akio (Kouji Sueyoshi) and Hideo (Masakatsu Sumioku) revealed her caring nature which made them feel prioritized. Her best scenes were those with Zaijian Jaranilla giving an exceptionally moving performance even if he was only seen on the screen of a mobile phone.

Sanya Lopez was effortlessly beautiful with her winning smile and personality. Her best scene was that one when Paris finally realized where her affair with Genji was going. As the turmoil of Saki's conflict is internal, Jane Oineza gave a very nuanced and restrained portrayal. Her best scene was actually that transformative reveal at the park picnic towards the end. Loisa Andalio was good as Wanna, but her coming of age as a GRO was not given enough focus. Also, her tendency to deliver her lines too loud could have been reined in. 

"Midnight Girls" is further proof of Irene Emma Villamor's talent as a storyteller, a reputation which she had steadily built with film she both wrote and directed. Despite the fact that there had been plenty of films about Filipinos working abroad, Villamor was able to tell these intertwined stories of four female GROs working in Nagoya in a manner that still felt fresh, vibrant and engaging. Villamor's decision to include interviews of real women who did the same work in Japan made us realize the authenticity of the stories we had witnessed. 8/10



Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Review of THE PUNISHER: ONE LAST KILL: Virulent Violence

May 13, 2026




The Punisher was a character who first appeared in a Marvel comic book in 1974, in "The Amazing Spider-Man" #129. Frank Castle was an ex-Marine who became a vigilante after his wife and two children were killed by Mafia gangsters. Using his skills in hand-to-hand combat and marksmanship, Castle went on to fight against the bad guys. However, unlike the typical superhero, the Punisher was merciless, and did not hesitate to kill. 

Since then, this anti-hero character, along with that distinctive skull design that he wore, had already made his transition to films. Dolph Lundgren first played Castle in "The Punisher" (Mark Goldblatt, 1989). Thomas Jane had another go at the character in another film entitled "The Punisher" (Jonathan Hensleigh, 2004).  Ray Stevenson played him in a reboot film, "Punisher: War Zone" (Lexi Alexander, 2008). Critics panned all three of these films.

After this, The Punisher franchise was rebooted in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Jon Bernthal introduced the character in the second season of Netflix series "Daredevil" (2016), as the ideological counterpoint to title character who was also a vigilante but did not kill his targets. "Punisher" had a spin-off series of his own also on Netflix from 2017–2019. He was brought back in the first season of "Daredevil: Born Again" (2025), streaming on Disney+. 

This year, "The Punisher" is back as the featured character in the third Marvel's Special Presentation, after "Werewolf by Night" (2022) and "The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday. Special" (2022). Jon Bernthal co-wrote and starred in this 45-minute film about the continuing internal torture Frank Castle had been experiencing since his family was killed by the gangsters of the Gnucci family, even after he had already exacted his revenge.

The grieving matriarch Ma Gnucci (Judith Light in an unexpected role) wanted to exact her own revenge for the death of her husband and sons at Castle's hands. On the anniversary of the death of her beloved youngest son, she sent out a city-wide contract for the death of Castle, which sent criminals of all kinds rushing over to Castle's apartment building to try to kill him. The ensuing mayhem was relentless and soon spilled out into the streets outside.

Even if you did not know anything about "The Punisher" as a character, you can still appreciate this film. There would be haunting flashbacks to encapsulize the past trauma in Frank's life that drove him to do what he does. The main highlight was certainly the seamlessly-edited series of brutally violent action sequences as Frank fought his way out of the endless horde after him, killing of all of them in the process -- not for the faint of heart!

One main aim for this special presentation was to reintroduce Frank Castle, his Punisher persona and his current psychological state to a wider audience. This is in time for his coming appearance on the big screen in "Spider-Man: Brand New Day" this July. How meaningful that The Punisher made his character debut in a Spider-Man comic book in 1974, and now, 52 years later, he is making his MCU feature film debut in a Spider-Man film. 8/10



Sunday, May 10, 2026

Review of THE SHEEP DETECTIVES: Offbeat Ovine Observers

May 10, 2026



Shepherd George Hardy (Hugh Jackman) owned a meadow outside the town of Denbrook, on which his flock of sheep were put out to pasture. Beyond feeding them, George also spent time reading detective crime mystery novels to his sheep. Among his favorites among his flock were the aloof loner Sebastian (Bryan Cranston), wise Merino sheep Mopple (Chris O'Dowd), the stately Sir Richfield (Patrick Stewart) and the smartest one of the group, Lily (Julia Louis-Dreyfus). The sheep would then discuss these cases when George went to bed. 

One night, a murder disturbed the peace in Hardy's farm, the first such case that the town's only policeman Tim Derry (Nicholas Braun) had ever handled. A visiting journalist Ellliot Matthews (Nicholas Galitzine) volunteered to help him. When Atty. Harbottle (Emma Thompson) arrived, the suspects were revealed -- the neighbor Caleb (Tosin Cole), the butcher Ham (Conleth Hill), the innkeeper Beth (Hong Chau), the priest Rev. Hillcoate (Kobna Holdbrook-Smith), and George's estranged daughter Rebecca (Molly Gordon). 

The screenplay of "The Sheep Detectives" was written by Craig Mazin, creator of HBO series "Chernobyl" (2019) and "The Last of Us" (2023), adapted from the 2005 German novel "Three Bags Full" by Leonie Swann. The film is the first live-action film (mixed with digital animation) directed by Kyle Balda, who is best known for animated films like "The Lorax" (2012) and "Minions" (2015), all for Illumination Studios. The big name actors (Jackman, Thompson) and voices (Louis-Dreyfus, Cranston) add prestige to this project.  

Watching the titular sheep detectives in action immediately called to mind the delightful 1995 movie "Babe," about a pig who wanted to be a sheepdog. That film was a commercial and critical success, even earning itself seven Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and Director for Chris Noonan. Its Oscar-winning visual effects team employed a mix of live animals (48 piglets had to be used to keep the size of Babe uniform), animatronics, and digital mouth manipulation to create the illusion of talking animals. 

The sophisticated visual effects we see in "The Sheep Detectives" shows the progress in this field for the past 30 years, as now all the animals are 100% photo-realistic computer-generated imagery. The photorealistic animals in "The Sheep Detectives" are more fully-realized, capable of expressively conveying human-like emotions. This is a positive progression from the grim, expressionless hyper-realistic CGI animals in "The Lion King" (2019) that garnered that older film a lot of negative criticism. 

Meanwhile, the film's detective story called to mind the Agatha Christie murder mysteries and the "Knives Out" films with the multiple suspects and wry humor. However, the big charming difference is that the human detective Tim Derry was so absurdly clueless, so the sheep needed to actively intervene in the investigation in the cutest, yet ingenious ways. Certain sheep beliefs, like ostracizing winter lambs, forgetting about bad things, and turning into clouds instead of dying, provided room for rich emotional tear-jerking moments. 9/10


Review of ALMOST US: Hoping Hurts

May 9, 2026



Janine (Fyang Smith) and RR (JM Ibarra) have been best friends since their childhood. They had special nicknames for each other -- Janine called RR "Pip," while RR called Janine "Bulots." Janine followed her mother's footsteps to take up Law. Atty. Melissa Mesina (Che Ramos) entrusted her to the care of RR, who was free to spend nights in her condo.  Meanwhile, RR applied to do volunteer work via an NGO called Guardians of Humanity.

RR had long been in love with Janine. However, she was head-over-heels obsessed about her music idol Kenzo (Dustin Yu), whom she even made into a superhero in her online fanfic entitled "My Undercover Love." Unknown to her, RR even helped to make her fanfic viral so that it would get Kenzo's attention, which it did. Janine was thrilled no end when Kenzo asked to treat her out to dinner, but RR tagged along as her unwilling chaperone. 

I have already seen JM Ibarra act before, in his official big screen debuting in the lead role of Cinemalaya film "Child No. 82 (Anak ni Boy Kana)."  Again, he proves his charisma and charm with the ladies, as well as his dramatic chops here, as he did before. As RR, Ibarra plays the more sympathetic character, the one more people can identify with. RR is the partner who had loved more than he was loved back, but who later learns to speak up for himself.

Fyang Smith was the grand winner of PBB Gen 11 in 2024. For her film debut as a lead, it was very brave for her to accept this role of Janine, a flawed character whose selfishness caused her to chase fantasies instead of seeing the love right beside her. She was given a number of awkward actions or corny lines, particularly those directed to Sue (Yuki Takahashi), whom she saw as a threat to her happiness, but Smith's winsome delivery saves the day. 

Dustin Yu makes a very good impression as an action star Kenzo in his fight scenes in the opening sequence, but unfortunately his fantasy character did not go much further afterwards.  Former indie child actor JM Salvado played RR's loud English-challenged friend Otep. Sam Samarita played Janine's pretentious Taglish-challenged pre-law classmate. Veteran indie actress Che Ramos made the most of Atty. Mesina's single scene together with Janine.

There was nothing really new about the plot, save for its zany Gen Z features, clearly not for my generation. Whether you find her cute or annoying, Fyang Smith's Janine provided that extra unique memorable quality to this very familiar story. This character's polarizing over-the-top personality, on top of the much-hyped anticipation for this Gen Z love-team's first film together,  distinguishes "Almost Us" from more generic rom-coms of its kind. 5/10