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Movie Review — Cinemalaya XXI: The Rewards of ‘Cinemartyrs’ Are Immense If You Can Get Through Its Digressive Experimental Narrative

Wanggo Gallaga
Wanggo Gallaga October 12, 2025
Sari Dalena’s Cinemartyrs is an experimental love letter to Filipino women filmmakers, blending history, memory, and the power of cinema into a moving, thought-provoking experience.

The conceptual conceit of Sari Dalena’s ‘Cinemartyrs’ creates a fantastic moment of catharsis at her film’s end that sort of rewards the audience from being able to muster the labyrinthine first half of her film. It’s a personal essay, a narrative historical rumination, and an artist’s statement about the power of film, all rolled into one experimental movie. The film meanders and strays from its plot, building a world that picks up all the elements it juggles into the air and creates a collision that can leave you breathless. It wasn’t an easy film for its first hour but once we reach the point of intersection, the film becomes a celebration of all that is wonderful about film and filmmaking.

‘Cinemartyrs’ follows Shirin (Nour Houshmand), a young filmmaker shooting a documentary that reenacts massacres from the Philippine-American war. When she shows her progress to the grant-giving body, they belittle her and the footage she has presented calling it incomplete.

Cinemartyrs
Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

She is then asked to include historical events that happened in Mindanao and Shirin takes her small crew to Jolo to document and revisit an American surprise attack on a Tausug village during a wedding. But as she begins filming on site, she touches upon something profound and metaphysical.

Cinemartyrs
Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

‘Cinemartyrs’ is an experimental film that uses the medium to remember fragments of history that is lost, to comment on them, and at the same time, make a commentary on the medium itself as a convergence point of history, geography, and culture.

Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

Time operates differently in the film, such as a wonderful scene showing Shirin’s mom (Raquel Villavicencio) working on research about Filipina directors and screenwriters from the early days of the Philippine film industry.

Cinemartyrs
Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

She is rediscovering them, engaging with them and their contributions to Philippine cinema and thus is able to bring back their spirit and have a conversation with them. This scene occurs within the first hour and diverts the narrative plot but becomes an essential element that plays on hard later on in the film.

Cinemartyrs
Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

But there are many digressions such as these in the film that can make the viewing of it a bit strained. It starts and stops and sometimes it works marvelously, like the scene of Villavicencio, but it can also appear indulgent and unnecessary as when Shirin and her husband, Kevin (Cedrick Juan) meet and have a sit down with Kidlat Tahimik (playing himself) talking about the duende, which Tahimik has discussed in many venues. Its repetition in the film feels out of place, so ordinary in a film that’s operating in the realm of the metaphysical.

Cinemartyrs
Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

Things don’t fully come together until the third act, when Shirin and her small team arrive at the Tausug village to reenact the massacre, and that’s when the film’s thesis finally comes into play. All the disparate subplots and digressions start to come together to create a climax that’s as visually stunning as it is profoundly moving.

Cinemartyrs
Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

The past is thrust into the present, the present is engaging with the past in a way that may be impossible and in the final scene of the film, the future is made clear. At the center of all of this is the medium of film as a gateway for this intersection. 

Cinemartyrs
Cinemartyrs | Photo courtesy of Cinemalaya / CCP Corporate Communications Division’

The film is definitely a personal one, with certain character interactions and dynamics feeling less universal and more distinct and unique; an inside joke we are made privy to but not included in. But what Dalena ends up creating is a love letter to Filipino women filmmakers who have paved the way in the industry and the way that they continue to break boundaries. Their very existence – and in the process of remembering them – is an opposition to the patriarchal hold of oppression our colonial past has left us. This is an immense work that requires a lot from its audience but also gives back tenfold.

4.0/5.0



Cinemartyrs is showing on the big screen. Check cinema showtimes near you and grab your tickets today.

This year, don’t miss Cinemalaya 21: LAYAG sa Alon, Hangin, at Unos happening from October 3-12, 2025! Witness another stellar lineup of stories that will move you and showcase the brilliance of Philippine cinema. Follow the Cultural Center of the Philippines and Cinemalaya for updates.

Tags: Cinemalaya, Cinemalaya 2025, Cinemalaya XXI, Cinemartyrs, movie review

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