Award-winning filmmaker Jun Robles Lana has never been one to shy away from difficult conversations, especially when it comes to the future of Philippine cinema. In a recent Facebook post, the director laid bare a growing concern that many moviegoers quietly feel but rarely articulate: the widening gap between Filipino films and the very people they were meant to serve.
“For decades, the MMFF was the ‘people’s festival,’” Lana wrote, recalling a time when the Metro Manila Film Festival was a shared national ritual. It was the season when ordinary workers could take their children to the mall, line up at the cinema, and watch their screen idols together. The MMFF was not just about movies—it was about access, community, and collective joy.
Today, however, that memory feels increasingly distant.
Lana points to a sobering reality: the cost of watching a film has quietly but steadily climbed beyond the reach of many Filipino families. A family of four, he noted, would need at least P1,500 just to step inside a movie theater—an amount that does not yet include transportation, food, or even a single bag of popcorn. For households carefully budgeting every peso, that figure alone turns a supposed leisure activity into an impossible expense.
“By pricing the ordinary Filipino out of the theater, the industry hasn’t just lost customers, it has lost its soul,” Lana wrote.
His words cut deep because they frame cinema not merely as entertainment, but as a cultural commons—something meant to be shared across classes, generations, and communities. When ticket prices effectively filter who gets to watch films on the big screen, cinema risks transforming from a unifying national experience into what Lana bluntly calls “a middle-class privilege.”
The contradiction, he argued, is especially stark in the context of the MMFF. Marketed as a “National” Film Festival, it celebrates Filipino stories, talent, and identity. Yet how national can it truly be if large segments of the nation are excluded by cost?
“You cannot promote a ‘National’ Film Festival while maintaining prices that exclude the nation,” Lana stressed.
Perhaps the most haunting line in his post comes at the end, where he situates the issue within everyday Filipino life. Until the industry admits that cinema has become a luxury the “P500 Noche Buena” family cannot afford, meaningful change remains elusive. Without that reckoning, Lana warned, what the country is witnessing is not progress, but “the slow, expensive sunset of Philippine cinema.”
Lana’s statement resonates because it challenges stakeholders—producers, exhibitors, policymakers, and audiences alike—to rethink what cinema is for, and who it should be accessible to. Beyond box-office numbers and festival buzz, his words raise a more fundamental question: if films are no longer within reach of the ordinary Filipino, can they still claim to tell the nation’s stories?