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Home PGMN Explains

Why Philippine Cinema Fell Off—and Who’s Trying to Save It

Emmanuel Lynx by Emmanuel Lynx
August 7, 2025
in Explains, PGMN, Trending
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Let’s start with a hot take: the Philippines used to have one of the most prolific film industries in the world. More films than France. More cinema seats than in Singapore. A nation addicted to the big screen.

Today? Local box office numbers have flatlined, MMFF is a punchline, and when Filipinos queue at the cinema, they’re usually lining up for Marvel or a Thai tearjerker—not a film made in Quezon City. What happened?

To understand the fall of Philippine cinema, you have to look beyond the clichés of bad scripts and slapstick.

It’s a story of economics, identity, diaspora tastes, and a culture that’s been bingeing K-dramas and American blockbusters for decades. But it’s also a story that isn’t over. There are battle-hardened directors, stubbornly idealistic producers, and yes—even the occasional drag queen superstar—fighting to bring it back.

The golden age collapsed under the weight of taxes, piracy, and political apathy

In the 1950s and again in the late 1970s, Filipino cinema thrived. Studios cranked out hundreds of films a year, and actors were practically gods. But by the early 2000s, the industry was producing fewer than 60 films annually.

Why? Start with this: 52% of a movie’s gross used to go straight to taxes and fees. Not infrastructure. Not subsidies. Just taxes. That left little for reinvestment in better scripts, special effects, or marketing. Then came piracy. By 2005, pirated DVDs were outselling cinema tickets by nearly two to one.

As the country’s biggest stars jumped ship to politics—Joseph Estrada, Lito Lapid, Tito Sotto, and more—the industry lost its most bankable names to the Senate. Even the box-office magic of Vilma and Nora couldn’t save an industry starved of investment and drained of leadership.

The audience didn’t disappear; it evolved faster than the industry did

Here’s the kicker: Filipinos didn’t stop watching movies. They just stopped watching local ones. Teleseryes, Korean dramas, anime, TikToks—these didn’t just compete with Pinoy films. They crushed them.

For years, mainstream Filipino movies leaned on the same tropes: love triangles, slapstick, family feuds, and the occasional revenge plot. It worked—until it didn’t.

As critic Jessica Zafra noted, studios became obsessed with copying whatever had last made money. Sukob did well? Cue five horror clones. The result? Diminishing returns and an audience that said, “pass.”

Meanwhile, K-dramas were investing in world-building, gorgeous cinematography, and scripts that moved with clockwork precision. The comparison was brutal. As director Jose Javier Reyes admitted, “Filipinos think Filipino films are trash. Which is true, sometimes.”

Local film lost its core market to ticket prices and Netflix

Want to see a film in Manila? That’ll cost you P400–P500. And if you’re a family of five—good luck. In contrast, a month of Netflix costs P149, with access to global content. Unsurprisingly, FDCP data shows that Class D and E audiences have all but stopped going to theaters.

That’s a major shift. These were once the very audiences that fueled mainstream cinema’s biggest hits. Now, even Class C viewers are watching more at home. FDCP chairperson Joey Reyes admits the “return viewer” no longer exists. You watch once. Then you scroll.

Filipino cinema is split between Cannes and comedy franchises

At one extreme, you have Lav Diaz, a director whose films win top prizes at Venice and Locarno. His work is epic in length, slow in tempo, and adored by critics abroad. But at home? A niche. His films are barely screened in commercial theaters.

At the other end is Vice Ganda. MMFF queen. Box office juggernaut. Her comedies may be dismissed by critics, but year after year, they rake in hundreds of millions.

In 2024, And the Breadwinner Is… earned P460 million and showed a more emotional side of Vice Ganda. Yet the divide remains: either you’re doing 3-hour slow cinema for film festivals, or you’re making franchise fluff for Christmas Day. There’s very little in between.

K-dramas didn’t kill Philippine cinema. But they raised the bar.

When Senator Jinggoy Estrada floated banning K-dramas in 2022, it wasn’t because they were bad. It was because they were too good.

Viewership of Korean series exploded in the Philippines in the 2000s and never looked back. Why? Because they delivered: better plots, better pacing, higher emotional payoff.

Some Filipino directors blamed the audience. Others, like Reyes, took a different route: study why K-dramas work. Copy their structure. Learn from them. Compete—don’t complain.

Filipino films still have hits. They just need to earn them now.

In late 2024, Hello, Love, Again became the highest-grossing Filipino film of all time. It raked in over P1.6 billion—a figure that rivaled Avengers: Endgame’s local run.

What made it work? A love team with built-in fans. Strong direction. High production value. And a plot that spoke to modern OFWs.

It proved one thing: when Filipino films are well-made and well-marketed, Filipinos show up. It’s not that the audience is gone. It’s that you have to win them back—every single time.

The people trying to save it are everywhere—you just have to look

There’s the FDCP, trying to lower amusement taxes and offer grants. There are platforms like Cinemalaya, QCinema, and Cinema One Originals, which champion new voices. There are TikTok film reviewers hyping indie releases. There are restored classics from Brocka and Bernal screening for Gen Z.

And there are filmmakers who refuse to quit. Mikhail Red. Antoinette Jadaone. Isabel Sandoval. Erik Matti. They’re not saving Philippine cinema alone—but they are proving it’s still worth saving.

The story isn’t over. But the ending depends on us

If you’re waiting for a feel-good comeback arc, here it is: Filipino cinema has hit rock bottom before and bounced back. It can again. But it’ll take risk, reinvention, and respect—for the craft, and for the audience.

Because let’s face it: Filipinos still love great stories. We just need to believe that ours are worth telling—and watching—again.

Tags: Philippine Cinema
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Emmanuel Lynx

Emmanuel Lynx

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