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I first met Baby Ruth Villarama during a special screening of “Food Delivery: Fresh from the West Philippine Sea.” Given the weight of the subjects she takes on in her documentaries — from migrant workers to maritime tensions — I expected someone whose voice would land like a gavel. Instead, she spoke softly, as if she knew the film could carry its own force. That calmness made the experience of watching her latest work even more disquieting.
Villarama frames two supply circuits that are actually the same story to powerfully demonstrate their interwoven nature. One thread shows the logistical grind of getting food for those serving at remote outposts — live goats, bleating in protest, are loaded onto boats, bundles of food supplies and crates lashed down, with last-minute lifts across a pier in Palawan.
This practical labor keeps these distant locations supplied. These are the lifelines for the troops deployed on isolated islands, who, despite defending the country’s frontlines, often struggle to even get a mobile signal strong enough to send money home to their families. You would expect a government to efficiently support and compensate its defenders, especially those risking their lives to protect the nation’s sovereignty. However, the reality is that the same government’s inefficiency in handling basic payments leaves these very defenders burdened with debt even as they protect a nation.
The other thread follows Filipino fishermen who still brave the sea, taking their boats to the familiar waters where they learned to fish and built their lives, hoping to bring back a catch for their community markets. These two stories converge — the deployed defenders rely on resupply runs, while coastal villages depend on the fish those small boats haul in. But China’s growing patrols are driving these fishermen away, cutting off access to the waters they’ve called home for generations and threatening not just their livelihoods, but the very fabric of their communities.
“Food Delivery” makes this intersection plain. National security, livelihoods, and food sovereignty are braided together. Hit one, and the others unravel. It is unflinching in showing how ordinary fishermen in faded shirts and sunburnt skin are chased from their traditional fishing grounds by vessels many times their size. It shows how it’s not just the government on the frontlines, but ordinary fishermen and coastal communities who face real danger every day. These are the people risking everything to protect our waters, often without the support or attention they deserve.
Among them is Arnel Satam, a Subic-based fisherman whose run toward Scarborough Shoal was captured in widely circulated footage in 2023. In that incident, his small outrigger was dwarfed by Chinese Coast Guard speedboats. The chase and the footage made him into a public figure overnight. But “Food Delivery” lets us see the person who keeps going back to the sea because that is how they feed their family.
Satam recalls a terrifying moment when Chinese forces held him at gunpoint, a stark reminder that power on the water is enforced through threats, not laws. Yet his response is beyond defiance. It is a quiet, hard-earned pragmatism. In the film, he says China can take the rocks if they want — the reefs and outcrops that international rulings recognize as Philippine territory. He surrenders not sovereignty, but the fight over symbols, because hunger doesn’t listen to maps or court decisions. For Satam, whose community depends on each catch, survival comes before territorial pride. The rocks mean nothing when the fish are gone.
Another fisherman, pushed to the edge by dwindling catches and constant patrols, half-jokes that if hunger is going to kill him, then he might as well die standing up to China.
Then there is Lawak Island, a stretch of white sand ringed by clear blue sea, where seagulls wheel and shriek overhead, unburdened by human conflict and able to cross from country to country without restriction. A Marine deployed here stands quietly among them, his stillness contrasting the birds’ effortless flight. It was impossible for me to miss the irony. Out here, the birds move with more freedom than the people risking their lives to guard these islands.
The film powerfully explores the unforgiving nature of the sea. When four fishermen vanish while fishing at Scarborough Shoal, their fellow villagers are left grappling with the agonizing uncertainty of their fate. Were they lost to a storm’s rough waters or captured by foreign forces? The sea is both giver and taker — providing the fish that sustain these communities, yet capable of swallowing lives in an instant.
This duality comes into sharp focus during one of the search operations. We see a floater pierced by the Philippine flag, deployed into the vast ocean as a lifeline for the missing fishermen — something they could cling to if they were still alive, a small chance to survive. This tiny symbol of hope, insignificant against the overwhelming scale of the sea, becomes a powerful metaphor. The film insists that hope is not a grand, easily grasped certainty. It is a struggling buoy in an immense, indifferent ocean, fiercely held onto despite its fragility.
What happened to the film after its release tells a story as troubling as the one onscreen. Screenings were canceled, major cinemas hesitated, and it was pulled from the 2025 Puregold CinePanalo Film Festival due to vague “external factors,” widely believed to be pressure over its sensitive subject. The fact that this urgent story about those defending our shores was silenced here at home shows how much our own divisions and fear of stepping on powerful toes are holding the country back from standing up to outside threats.
The film’s struggle to be seen mirrors the neglect it exposes. Fishermen and Marines battle giant forces at sea, while “Food Delivery” fights for a place in its own country. China’s pressure is only part of the problem. The bigger fight is against the systems and attitudes here at home that turn a blind eye to the people risking everything to safeguard our seas.
“Food Delivery” is a battle cry demanding we stand with those risking everything in silence — their livelihoods, safety, futures — to defend the Philippines’ maritime rights. Their fight rages not just across storm-tossed seas, but inside the cold, indifferent halls of power where decisions are made. Abandon these frontliners, silence their voices — like the censorship that keeps their stories hidden — and leave them unsupported, and the nation’s grip on its own waters will slip away.
The film ends with, “The four fishermen are still missing.” That present tense clings to fragile hope — one that’s crushed not just by the merciless sea, but by officials who bow to pressure and condemn these men to being forgotten. — WALPHS.com