The idea of making a movie based around the epidemic of missing women is startling: to turn this issue into entertainment feels exploitative and disrespectful. Though it is not impossible to make a genre film about social problems, it is a difficult task. When the focus is on creating an engaging film, the question arises of whether there is sufficient space for discussions of real-world violence. Too often, these considerations are sacrificed in favor of narrative thrills and genre conventions. And when its plot is centered around a socio-political problem but still focuses almost exclusively on the protagonists, its ability to provide an in-depth look at these issues is further diminished. This melancholy murk acts like a psychological wet blanket on what could have been a crackling whodunit. The slow reveal of Olivia’s (Kelley Day) close friendship with Isabela (Yuki Sonoda) does nothing to heighten or illuminate the present drama. Director Joel C. Lamangan mistakes withholding and then abruptly delivering information for dramatic building toward a payoff. When Lamangan decides to come clean about Olivia’s past the results are like emotion-streaked information dumps. Yet as the film progresses, Lamangan strips away everything that initially makes it so distinctive, adding artificial moments and tension that feel tired and irrelevant. It is cheaply used as a shortcut to drama, but never actually comes alive. The ostensible social issue concerning All About Her (3:16 Media Network, 2026) is the disproportionate rate of domestic violence and murder faced by women. It’s difficult to call the film a complete failure given both its general effectiveness as a procedural and its attempts to shed light on social issue rarely portrayed on film.
Enough worthwhile elements are present to make the shaky execution seem all the more disappointing. Day isn't able to bring much depth to Olivia, a character who makes up half of a cliché, same goes with Sonoda’s Isabela. Suarez (Angelica Cervantes), a female NBI agent forms the emotional center of an investigation into wrongful death. All About Her focuses on the systemic, unchecked violence committed against women. It reveals interest in the interiority of law enforcement personnel—especially young women. As the film progresses, we find out that Isabela and William (Tony Labrusca) spend the evening in an abandoned vacant lot with William, brutally beating her. True abjection cannot be experienced by male characters in cinema. Even when robbed of their weapons or jobs or status, men are still in possession of a metanarrative of power—they’re not the right candidate for catharsis. This metanarrative is made up of a constellation of details. The movie’s structure probably does not require the man to experience sexual violence, as if often requires of its women protagonists. One reason why we never see men gripped by fear in our popular narratives is that men like to feel powerful and most of the time, they’re the ones telling the stories. But genre awareness can give us more than the dynamics baked into a movie’s plot. Genre is a comparative idea—you have to see across movies in order to get a hold on a genre, which inevitably means that some details get flattened out. What movies do with our anxieties (why do cops kill?) changes from work to work and from year to year. If we are to learn anything new about our own hopes and fears for law enforcement, we have to find a new point of entry for movie-making: not cautionary pornography. There’s something else going on here and masculinity is at its heart. The movie that can wring catharsis out of that will be a long time coming.
Directed By: Joel C. Lamangan
Screenplay: Quinn Carillo
Director of Photography: Journalie Payonan
Editing: Hannah Buhrman
Production Design: Cyrus Khan
Musical Scorer: Dek Margaja
Sound Design: Paulo Estero





