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Friday, March 27, 2026

The $17 Billion Gamble: Why ‘Forgotten Island’ is the Ultimate Litmus Test for Filipino Stories


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For decades, the Filipino footprint in global animation has been a ghost in the machine. Look at the credits of any Disney masterpiece, Marvel blockbuster, or Netflix hit, and you will find our names. We have built the worlds, rendered the lighting, and animated the heroes. But we have almost always been the architects of someone else’s dream—essential, yet invisible in the background.


On September 25, 2026, that narrative doesn't just shift; it undergoes a seismic transformation.


With the release of "Forgotten Island," a major Hollywood titan isn't just hiring Filipino talent to build a world—they are betting millions that a Filipino world can conquer the globe.


The Discipline of a Giant: DreamWorks vs. Pixar

To understand why this matters, you have to look at the scoreboard. The animation industry is currently a battlefield of "bloated budgets" and "creative pivots." While other studios have faltered, DreamWorks Animation has quietly weaponized a rare trait: discipline.


They don't panic. They don't overspend. They just win.


"Puss in Boots: The Last Wish" was declared dead after a weak $12 million opening. DreamWorks stayed the course; it eventually clawed its way to $484 million.


"The Wild Robot" turned a $78 million budget into a $335 million victory.


"How to Train Your Dragon" soared to $627 million.


By focusing on efficiency and emotional resonance over spectacle, DreamWorks has done the unthinkable: they’ve overtaken Pixar in total global box office, sitting on a $17.3 billion throne. This is the studio currently holding the keys to the kingdom. And for the first time, they have looked at a story rooted in the Philippines and asked, "Will the world watch?"


The answer they arrived at was a resounding, "Let’s find out."


Beyond the "Struggle Narrative"

For too long, when the global stage looked at the Philippines, it saw a very specific, limited lens: poverty, the plight of overseas workers, or the weight of historical struggle. These are vital stories, but they aren't the only stories.


"Forgotten Island" is a rebellion against that box. Directed by Filipino-American Januel Mercado, the film doesn't try to "explain" the Philippines to an audience. It simply is Filipino. Through its razor-sharp humor, lush mythology, and distinctive setting, it uses our culture not as a teaching tool, but as a vibrant, fresh canvas for a universal human experience: the bittersweet ache of friendship and the reality of growing apart.


"This isn't about waving a flag or forcing pride. It’s about proof. In Hollywood, nothing moves unless it works financially."


The Brutal Reality of the "Green Light"

Make no mistake—this isn't a charity project born of a sudden love for the archipelago. This is a high-stakes experiment. In the entertainment industry, success creates a pipeline; failure welds the door shut.


If Forgotten Island scales, it proves to every executive in Burbank and Los Gatos that Filipino creators, settings, and mythos are a "category." It signals to investors that our stories are a viable, profitable commodity. It turns a "one-time experiment" into a movement.


But if it fails? The industry goes back to the safe, the familiar, and the "maybe not yet."


The First Crack in the Door

The stakes for Forgotten Island transcend representation. This isn't just about "feeling seen"—it’s about being undeniable. We are moving from the background to the center of the frame, testing whether a story born from our soil can carry its own weight on the world stage.


On September 25, the world will decide if the door stays open.

Angara pushes stronger farm-to-school links during Batangas school visit


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LIPA CITY, Batangas, 26 March 2026 — Education Secretary Sonny Angara on Thursday underscored the role of agriculture in improving student nutrition and strengthening local communities as he met with farmer cooperatives during a visit in Batangas.

Angara joined farmers, school officials, and education stakeholders in a dialogue aimed at strengthening the connection between schools and local agriculture through the Department of Education’s expanded School-Based Feeding Program (SBFP). The initiative seeks to source fresh produce directly from farmer groups while providing more nutritious meals for learners.





The school visit formed part of a multi-agency program in Batangas led by the Office of the Executive Secretary that also included the inauguration of new infrastructure projects and the opening of additional school facilities in Lipa City.

At Tangway Integrated School, Angara met with representatives from nine farmer cooperatives and discussed how local agricultural production can support school feeding efforts and help ensure a steady supply of fresh vegetables for students.

“Kinikilala natin ang mahalagang papel ng ating mga magsasaka, lalo na sa gitna ng mga hamon na kanilang kinakaharap,” Angara said. “Malaki ang ambag nila sa Expanded SchoolBased Feeding Program na mas marami nang mag-aaral ang maaabot.”

DepEd is set to launch its largest School-Based Feeding Program yet after securing a historic PhP25.6 billion budget for School Year 2026–2027, more than double the PhP11.8 billion allocated in 2025. The expanded funding is expected to support 4.63 million learners starting June, making the program one of the largest nutrition interventions in public schools of President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s administration.

Tangway Integrated School currently serves 895 learners, and its feeding program supports undernourished students through regular feeding activities using vegetables sourced from its school garden and nearby farms. For School Year 2025–2026, the school provided nutritious
meals to 121 undernourished learners, contributing to improvements in learner health, attendance, and participation in class activities.

The school is being positioned as a pilot site for a farm-to-school procurement model, which aims to allow farmer cooperatives to directly supply produce to schools. The approach is expected to create a stable market for farmers while ensuring fresh and nutritious meals for
students.

Earlier in the day, Angara joined Executive Secretary Ralph Recto and other Cabinet officials in inaugurating a four-storey, 16-classroom building at Padre Valerio Malabanan Elementary School in Lipa City, part of government efforts to address classroom shortages and improve
learning spaces.

The activities were part of the broader “Matatag na Batangas Tungo sa Bagong Pilipinas” initiative, which highlights cooperation between national agencies and local governments to strengthen infrastructure, social services, and education programs for Filipino learners and
families

𝐌𝐠𝐚 𝐠𝐚𝐰𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐚𝐭 𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐠 𝐩𝐚𝐧𝐠𝐰𝐢𝐤𝐚, 𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐚𝐥𝐚𝐤𝐚𝐲 𝐬𝐚 𝐩𝐚𝐤𝐢𝐤𝐢𝐩𝐚𝐠𝐩𝐮𝐥𝐨𝐧𝐠 𝐧𝐠 𝐊𝐖𝐅 𝐬𝐚 𝐂𝐚𝐠𝐚𝐲𝐚𝐧


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Nakipagpulong si Tagapangulong Atty. Marites Barrios-Taran ng KWF kay Gobernador Edgar Aglipay sa pagbisita sa Cagayan Provincial Capitol, Lungsod Tuguegarao noong 17 Marso 2026.


Ibinahagi sa pulong ang mga gawain at programa ng KWF sa pagpapaunlad at pangangalaga ng wikang Filipino at mga wika ng Pilipinas.





Dumalo rin dito sina Undersecretary Harold Cabreros ng Office of Civil Defense (OCD) at Vice Mayor Lloyd Antiporda ng bayan ng Buguey upang ibahagi ang pag-unlad at kalagayan ng Cagayan Valley.


Napagtuonan ng usapan ang pagtugon sa krisis sa literasiya ng kabataan sa pamamagitan ng pagpapahalaga sa wika, kultura, at kasaysayan sa mga paaralan.


Napagkasunduan ng mga opisyal na maglatag ng mga hakbang upang mapangalagaan ang mga nanganganib na wika sa lalawigan at mapanatili ang lokal na identidad ng mga mamamayan.


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