

Three women, one fertility festival, zero subtlety about what they really want.
Pandanggo has three stories with parallel themes converging in one event, the Kasilonawan Festival in Obando: a career woman learning to dance tango who is torn between her dance partner and live-in partner has to choose the man who will satisfy her dream of raising a family; a wife whose wish to conceive a baby boy to make her husband happy brings her feet to the festival, but fate has other plans of bringing the child into her life; and a modern woman who, amidst her medical condition that might render her childless for the rest of her life, finds connection with an ancient lore about fertility.
Acting
Chin Chin Gutierrez carries her segment with devastating restraint.
Direction
Three directors, one cohesive vision — the Obando convergence actually works.
Cinematography
The festival sequences feel genuinely transcendent, not tourist-brochure pretty.

Director
Dennis Empalmado
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The Kasilonawan Festival is real: Obando's fertility rites predate Spanish colonization, making this one of the few films to engage genuinely animist Filipino tradition rather than Catholic overlay.
This was Galila, Lozendo and Empalmado's thesis film at UP Film Institute — the 130-minute runtime was reportedly demanded by their thesis panel, explaining some pacing bloat.