LIST: Sinag Maynila 2025 finalists revealed

5 feature films, 4 documentaries, 11 student documentaries, 16 short films and 25 student short films, the Sinag Maynila Independent Film Festival continues to champion stories made by Filipinos for the Filipinos.

In its seventh year, the festival will run from September 24 to 30 at Gateway Cineplex 18, Robinsons Manila, Robinsons Antipolo, SM Fairview, and SM Mall of Asia. The ticket price is P250.

Colorful graphic promoting the Sinag Maynila Independent Film Festival, featuring Philippine landmarks, festive bunting, and event details including the festival dates from September 24 to 30, 2025.

Check out the official finalists below:

Feature Films

  1. Altar Boy
    Directed by Serville Poblete
    Starring Mark Bacolcol, Shai Barcia, Pablo S.J. Quiogue
    Synopsis: A passive-natured teenager struggles to navigate the school year while trying to break free from the persona built around his religious upbringing.
  2. Cande
    Directed byKevin Pison Piamonte
    Starring Gian G. Pomperada, JC Santos, Sunshine Teodoro 
    Synopsis: A successful Filipino chef in New York returns to his hometown for his childhood best friend’s funeral, where he must confront a tragic past and the possibility of long-overdue forgiveness amid the backdrop of a vibrant hometown fiesta.
  3. Jeongbu
    Director by Topel Lee
    Starring Aljur Abrenica, Ritz Azul, Empress Schuck
    Synopsis: JEONGBU is the story of an evil element who wants to change the personality of Ethan’s wife and make her love him more than her own. ‘Jeongbu’ is a Korean word that also means ‘mistress’.
  4. Madawag Ang Landas Patungong Pag-Asa (The Teacher)
    Director by Joel Lamangan 
    Starring Rita Daniela, Jak Roberto, Albie Casino
    Synopsis: Three years after a shooting incident and the pandemic shut down the elementary school in a remote village, a new teacher arrives and struggles to persuade the children to return to class and work with a community accustomed to the “old ways”.
  5. Selda Tres (Cell Number 3)
    Director by GB Sampedro
    Starring Carla Abellana, JM de Guzman, Cesar Montano
    Synopsis: After a brief and wrongful incarceration, a law office messenger helps defend his former cellmates in court as a paralegal.

Documentary – Open Call

  1. Bai
    Directed by Dimae “Ben” Holzhauer
    Synopsis: Set in Butuan City in 2004, five football-obsessed kids use heart and hustle to help Mimi—the only girl among them—defy the odds and chase a dream that reaches far beyond the streets they call home.
  2. Embo Between Two Cities
    Directed by Charles Kirby Fabellon
    Synopsis: The 300,000 residents of EMBO were just numbers on paper but behind the data are real people, families, and lives caught in a political war between two cities. Their voices were left unheard as the transition unfolded.
  3. Mga Bayaning Ayta (Ayta Heroes)
    Directed by Donnie Sacueza
    Synopsis: The first-ever Filipino video documentary that narrates the tales of bravery exhibited by our Indigenous Ayta Warriors (Negritos), who valiantly defended our nation and fought for our freedom during World War II.
  4. Oscar’s Recipe
    Directed by Giovanni Piolo V. Rayla
    Synopsis: A former Walt Disney World executive chef now passionately crafts and serves top-notch, yet affordable dishes to students at his small restaurant in the Philippines.

Documentary – Students

  1. Alon Likha (Waves of Creation)
    Directed by Deanne Marie S. Idanan
    Synopsis: Alon Likha follows Alvin “Tulala” Vergara, a pioneering Caviteño battle rapper who built a haven for artists through Ingay Likha—until its sudden end forced him to confront the silence left behind. A lyrical soul, lost and found.
  2. Ballasiwen Ti Pinagbiyag (Across The Divide)
    Directed by Ahron Cula
    Synopsis: A dedicated teacher braves a 28km motorcycle ride, treacherous lake crossing, and grueling hike to reach her Aeta students, determined to break the cycle of poverty through education.
  3. Daungan Ng Mga Naghihintay (Where The Waiting Docks)
    Directed by Kaila Arvi B. Ariston
    Synopsis: As fishermen vanish in the West Philippine Sea, a coastal community confronts loss, fear, and the unseen cost of maritime conflict.
  4. Kaliwa (Kaliwa: The Dam)
    Directed by Jade Oraa
    Synopsis: The looming Kaliwa Dam Project inched the Indigenous People’s way to the President and to the people for persistent calls.
  5. Pagtipig (Keeping)
    Directed by Reutsche Colle Lima
    Synopsis: The Chicken Inasal vendors of Bacolod’s Manokan Country are fighting to preserve a culture and history that has been lovingly built over the past 40 years. However, a redevelopment plan now threatens to erase the very essence that makes this cultural landmark special.
  6. Pendiyente
    Directed by Zyra Mae Plegaria
    Synopsis: In a nation of sailors, Pendiyente follows families trapped in grief and uncertainty as they seek truth and justice for their missing loved ones lost at sea.
  7. PDL 000 
    Directed by Zechri Jacob L. Alvarez
    Synopsis: In Ilocos Norte jail, inmates craft bonsai bead trees, tiny works of art that hold the weight of hope and redemption, proving that even in captivity, beauty finds a way to grow.
  8. Puno’t Dulo Ng Bahaghari (Beginning And End Of The Rainbow)
    Directed by Kyle Dexter Millave
    Synopsis: The documentary follows a trans man and a trans woman as they face the struggles of being called by their birth names in a country without gender recognition laws.
  9. Romeo And Julie
    Directed by Ysamae Yrrah Carelo & Edward John Louis Factes
    Synopsis: How can one begin to build a life when their very existence is unrecognized? Romeo and Julie is a documentary that follows two adult foundlings in their search for belongingness and identity, after aging out of a system that left them without legal recognition.
  10. Sa Wakas, Kasama (Finally, With You)
    Directed by Janno Pelias
    Synopsis: A son of an overseas Filipino worker documents his time with his father, who had recently returned full-time back home after being overseas for so long.
  11. Tuninong Na Pagpayaba (Silent Love)
    Directed by Lorenz Adler A. Villamor
    Synopsis: Living with his deaf mother and father, a ten-year-old boy discovers a new meaning of love amidst the silence of their home.

Short Films – Open Call

  1. Ang Babayi sa Suba (The Woman From The River)
    Directed by Jonathan Jurilla
    Synopsis: When a desperate woman emerges from a river searching for a mysterious figure named Dungan, she must choose between trusting a shadowy stranger who offers passage across deadly waters or remaining trapped in a world that refuses to help her.
  2. Ang Gadya Sang Suba (The Tale Of The River Monster)
    Directed by Daniel de la Cruz
    Synopsis: Seven-year-old Ding revels in the mystery of the river monster that takes the lives of people in an enchanted river, embarking on a journey with his friends to confront the Gadya Sang Suba (River Monster).
  3. Defectives 
    Directed by Jalen Buenaseda
    Synopsis: Two lost robots question their purpose and existence while trying to find their owner.
  4. Hello, Mr. Jenkins
    Directed by Gian Arre & Flo Reyes
    Synopsis: A quiet girl clings to the safety of a fantasy world to escape the online advances of an older man until her safe haven begins to warp, reflecting the sinister desires of the stranger she was forced to entertain.
  5. Kataw 
    Directed by Alyssa Ashley Manugas
    Synopsis: In a future where climate change has submerged nations, a group of children undergo an experimental surgery to emulate a mythical creature and ensure their generation’s and Filipinos’ survival.
  6. Lip Sync Assassin
    Directed by Jon Galvez
    Synopsis: A fabulous drag queen moonlights as a hired killer and receives her new target that tests how far she can go to support her daughter and family.
  7. Muli Na Ka, Merlie (Merlie, Go Home)
    Directed by Shane David
    Synopsis: Facing the threat of demolition, Merlie, a young girl, makes her bravest decisions in the hopes of staying.
  8. Nagahanaw Na Mga Aninipot (Vanishing Fireflies)
    Directed by JP Corton
    Synopsis: In the aftermath of Typhoon Yolanda in Tabango, Leyte, fireflies that once lit the nights begin to disappear. Young Russell steps bravely into the darkness to find a new light of hope in the face of overwhelming loss.
  9. Open Time
    Directed by Mark Moneda
    Synopsis: “Open Time” is a coming-of-age short film about a homeless boy whose life changes after joining a high-stakes computer game match led by elite high school student players.
  10. Parapo (Stop!)
    Directed by Jhonny Bobier
    Synopsis: The worst visual depiction of the several harmful cultures that every Filipino person is exposed to.
  11. Sa Pwesto ni Pistong (The Barber’s Chair)
    Directed by VinJo Entuna
    Synopsis: A humble barber navigates a tumultuous era while serving a diverse array of customers including a prominent hacendero and an idealistic nephew.
  12. Si Sir kag ang Gamay nga Bata (Sir And The Kid)
    Directed by Seb Valdez
    Synopsis: Two mystical beings coexist with the people of Brgy. Fabrica, silently witnessing their daily lives—the good, the bad, and the absurdity in between.
  13. Together
    Directed by Blasgil C. Tanquilut
    Synopsis: In a world on the brink of collapse, two couples struggling to survive find renewed hope in a mysterious young girl, only to discover that salvation comes at a price that will test their love, loyalty, and the true meaning of family.
  14. Transients
    Directed by Kyla Danelle Romero
    Synopsis: After reconnecting through a phone call, Justin, an analog filmmaker, and Grace, a frustrated poet, reminisce about the day they first met.
  15. Walk with Jesus
    Directed by Redh Honoridez
    Synopsis: While hiding from a pursuing death squad, Maya encounters Jesus, who takes her out for a walk. Will she be home in time for the ultimate test of faith?
  16. Walo-walo: Walo ka Adlaw nga Kanay, Walo ka Adlaw nga Labugay (Sea Krait: Eight Days of Calm, Eight Days of Turbulence)
    Directed by Mery Grace Rama-Mission
    Synopsis: When the sea has gone mad for 8 relentless days, would you risk leaving your young family, hoping the promised 8 days of calm will follow?

Short Films – Students

  1. 50/50 (FIFTY/ FIFTY)
    Director – Kien Manuntag
    An incoming college freshman struggles to choose between his passion for filmmaking and fulfilling his father’s dream of becoming an engineer, while holding two college acceptance letters, he must decide which path will shape his future.
  2. Akin Ang Buhok Ko (My Hair Is Mine)
    Director – Luke Salazar
    Akin Ang Buhok Ko follows the story of Juan, a 9-year-old kid, who simply wants to keep his long hair against the wishes of the adults around him.
  3. Alimuom (Petrichor)
    Director – Yasmin Andrea Chan
    A father’s journey through a trial that traps him in a decision to conceal the truth—no matter the cost.
  4. Alingawngaw (Dissonance)
    Director – Marco Bravo
    An art student struggles with her mental health and inner demons as she races to finish a self-portrait against the ticking clock.
  5. Ang Luha Ay Bahagi Ng Karagatan (Tears Are Part Of The Ocean)
    Director – Ryner Viray
    In a mental rehabilitation center, a woman, newly turned sixty, with schizoaffective disorder, waits all year for her family to visit on her birthday. But as the day arrives, a typhoon threatens to derail her plans and her sense of reality.
  6. Bisa (Power You Hold)
    Directors – Sabrina San Juan & Jan Nicole Nieves
    Arm in arm, we will change the course of this world. There will be uprising from the darkness of oppression.
  7. Boi
    Director – Luke Del Castillo
    A teenage boy named Reggie holds his stepfather at gunpoint while his mother unfold the wicked reason behind it.
  8. Forty-Nine, Fifty
    Director – Johnfil Crisjim Nunez
    A sick woman clings to a superstition that fallen utensils bring visitors, but only when her picture frame falls do people finally come.
  9. In Case You Miss It
    Director – Jadrien Morales
    A high school campus journalist navigates his now strained relationship with his best friend after the unauthorized publication of his disapproved article.
  10. Ipon-Ipon
    Director – John Rev A. Remo
    Nine-year old Jepoy saves coins from playing pogs for a simple picnic that he hopes can mend his broken family.
  11. Kadigaguman (Echo)
    Director – Zarrina Fernandez
    A 21-year-old man, trapped in a suffocating and abusive relationship with a fanatically religious 60-year-old woman, reaches his breaking point and murders her. Only to find her inexplicably alive and himself reliving the same twisted nightmare.  
  12. Lado (Rotten Coconut)
    Director – John Rey De La Cruz
    Each piece of coconut brings hope that life will grow as sweet as its flesh, but no matter how tough the husk and shell are, in life’s challenges, they eventually wear down (get destroyed) in the end.
  13. Mga Aningal Sa Taguangkan (Echoes From The Womb)
    Director – Rovic Lopez
    Upon knowing that he impregnated his other girlfriend, Charles suggests to abort the child but fails to convince the woman— pushing him to flee and stay with his grandma in the far-flung countryside of Central Panay. There, he would be seduced by the supernatural— confronting him of the choices he willfully took.
  14. MIK-AP (Make-Up)
    Director – Justiny Sayson
    Two veteran makeup artists from different worlds are mysteriously united in a dreamlike studio where the living and the dead meet.
  15. Nostalgia
    Director – Aries C. Ferrer
    A young man preparing to leave home finds a dead body in his house.
  16. Opportunity
    Director – Eunice Sy
    When an opportunity strikes for the chicken to prove his worth in battle, amidst the world treating him unfairly.
  17. Puhon (Someday)
    Director – Lady Princes A. Tero
    Ricky and Marcus, cousins from Ormoc, reunite in Manila after years apart. While Marcus is still pursuing his dreams, Ricky hides a painful truth, that he dropped out of college. As the night unfolds, their conversation peels back layers of ambition, failure, and the weight of expectations.
  18. Sa Humba Nimo (Your Humba)
    Director – Allen Joshua S. Trinidad
    Back once more in the province, Alex and her mother cook the very peculiar but comforting and warm Humba, fondly reminiscing about her grandmother.
  19. Si Balong At Si Doro (Balong And Doro)
    Director – Jenser Recosana
    A Friendship forced to part ways due to an unexpected turn of events.
  20. Taga-Taga (Praying Mantis)
    Director – Trini Archie V. Garcia
    A female praying mantis faces a dilemma as she falls for a playful male helping her find a mate. Torn between her growing feelings and their mission, she struggles to decide whether to follow her heart or stick to the plan.
  21. The Night is Alive
    Director – Vincent Ibut
    Two best friends working late step out for a break, stumbling upon a bizarre scene in an alley—unaware it marks the start of a zombie apocalypse. Armed with wit and their love of zombie films, they navigate the chaos, turning survival into adventure.
  22. Through The Viewfinder
    Director – Charlie Garcia Vitug
    A photographer with glaucoma documents his life as he goes blind.
  23. Tinigom (Savings)
    Director – Keith Nemenzo
    In a struggling community, a young girl and her father find hope in a humble thrift can, believing that every coin saved brings them closer to her dream of education.
  24. Una’t Huling Inuman (First And Last Drinking Session)
    Director – Dominic Rivera
    In a toxic hypermasculine world, a man struggles to keep his secret as he drinks and catches up with his nosy friend group. 
  25. Walahanon (Left)
    Director – Kristal Kaye C. Tadle
    Carlo, a left-handed teenager struggles to break free from his father’s rigid expectations, using his art to express a truth that once tore their family apart.
A group of filmmakers and participants posing for a photo at the Sinag Maynila Independent Film Festival, with a prominent festival backdrop displaying the festival name and slogan.

Sinag Maynila is an independent film festival co-founded by Solar Entertainment President Wilson Tieng and world-renowned director Brillante Mendoza. Its mission is to be a beacon of Philippine cinema, providing a platform for filmmakers to showcase their craft and tell stories that resonate with local and international audiences. The festival aims to promote artistic freedom and support the growth of a new generation of filmmakers.

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