Metro Manila Film Festival 2025: Slick but shallow
By Joseph L. Garcia, Senior Reporter
Movie Review
Shake, Rattle & Roll: Evil Origins
Directed by Shugo Praico, Joey de Guzman, and Ian Lore帽os
Produced by Regal Entertainment
MTRCB Rating: R-13
This 17th installation of Shake, Rattle, & Roll delivers good ol鈥 jumpscares (I screamed twice) and passable plots, but sputters towards the end.
The first two stories of the anthology (which have a plot point in common) titled 鈥1775鈥 and 鈥2025,鈥 prove immediately why the horror franchise has become a staple in Philippine cinema鈥檚 Christmas diet. As for the third: eh.
The first, 鈥1775,鈥 opens with some very beautiful nuns. We don鈥檛 exaggerate: the cast includes the Ortega sisters Ysabel and Ashley. The nuns鈥 wimples and veils charmingly frame the faces of Carla Abellana, Janice de Belen (she鈥檚 a star for a reason; her face can still fight against much younger actresses), and even sexy star Ara Mina (from Mano Po鈥檚 butt-crack dress to a complete nun鈥檚 habit, she鈥檚 still something to watch on the big screen. Kudos!).
A mysterious chest arrives at the convent, which the nuns theorize in Spanish as coming from Mexico (the period film is set during the height of the Galleon Trade). Meanwhile, Ms. Abellana鈥檚 character is locked away in the cellar for her nightly fits and visions. The chest tempts the nuns one by one, while Ms. De Belen鈥檚 character rules over the nuns with frightening tyranny.
We commend this segment for the wonderful set and production design, not to mention the gorgeous costumes (yes, they are nuns鈥 habits, but they鈥檙e made with such care). The plot leaves so much room to make this segment into its own movie (the chest鈥檚 manipulations leave room for so much more), and the actresses play their roles so well. The gothic setting in a convent is a bit too easy, but it works in bringing suspense. We suppose our only gripes about this segment are the cheap jump-scares and one or two too-easy deaths.
The 鈥2025鈥 segment is for a certain generation: younger millennials and Gen Z. It鈥檚 an old-fashioned slasher (teens are stalked by masked creeps during a rave) but my, oh my: it looks and sounds VERY good. The fact that it鈥檚 set in a rave means they have paid extra care to the music, and we鈥檙e already looking forward to the soundtrack to play at our next party. The cinematography is, as the kids once said, 鈥渓it,鈥 and it is shot as smoothly as a music video. The experience is hypnotic, and visually delightful: never mind that half the segment is a gore-fest, but so wonderfully choreographed.
The third segment, 鈥2050鈥 follows the same slick production values of the first two, and offers an evocative view of a post-apocalyptic Philippines. We鈥檙e not super onboard with the plot though: the entity in the damned chest from the first segment, which made an appearance in the second, has gained strength and has won 鈥 taking over the country. Richard Gutierrez and his merry band have to defeat the entity and the thing inside the box. It鈥檚 shot more like a first-person video game than a movie, and shares the same fast pace.
(Spoilers!)
The third segment shows the film鈥檚 big baddie as a cheap copy of Harry Potter villain, Voldemort. Imagine our distress after the build-up from the first two segments, because in our heads: maybe the enemy is corruption. Think about it: in 鈥1775鈥 it arrives in the Philippines through colonialism, thrives in the church, tempts with comfort. In its death throes, it brings down the church with it (literally). In the second segment, 鈥2025,鈥 it is worshipped and protected and fed blood by a select few, while thriving inside a playground of the rich. In 鈥2050,鈥 it has finally won, leaving the country a desolate place; its people left to pick refuse.
The first two segments are a must-watch for horror fans, and even give a wink by casting Shake, Rattle, & Roll vets Ms. De Belen and Manilyn Reynes. The film taken as a whole is good for a scream or three, and overall a visual feast. Just don鈥檛 overthink it like I did.

