Filipino entertainment has a memory problem. Not the kind where we forget—but the kind where we refuse to let go.

Every year, networks resurrect old love teams, reboot classic teleseryes, and repackage familiar tropes. Kathryn and Daniel. Bea and John Lloyd. Even Mara Clara and Encantadia get recycled, reimagined, and reintroduced to a new generation. And while nostalgia can be comforting, it’s starting to feel like a creative crutch.
Why are we so obsessed with the past?
Part of it is emotional. Filipino audiences form deep, almost devotional bonds with love teams. These pairings aren’t just romantic—they’re symbolic. They represent eras, feelings, even personal milestones. To see them again is to relive a part of ourselves.
But there’s a darker side to this nostalgia. It can stifle innovation. When networks prioritize familiar faces and formulas, they leave less room for new voices, new genres, and new risks. It’s why indie films struggle for airtime. It’s why queer stories are often sidelined. It’s why experimental formats rarely survive.
And let’s talk about the economics. Reboots and love teams are safe bets. They come with built-in fanbases, guaranteed ratings, and viral potential. In a competitive media landscape, safety often wins over originality. But at what cost?
We’re seeing the consequences. Storylines feel recycled. Characters lack depth. Emotional beats become predictable. And audiences—especially younger ones—are starting to tune out. They crave authenticity, diversity, and surprise. They want stories that reflect their lives, not just their parents’ favorites.
Enter Love You So Bad, the launching film of Dustin Yu, Will Ashley, and Bianca de Vera—a project that both leans into nostalgia and attempts to modernize it.

Inspired by the 1998 classic Dahil Mahal Na Mahal Kita, the film reimagines the iconic love triangle through a Gen Z lens. Directed by Mae Cruz-Alviar and written by Crystal San Miguel, it promises “kilig with depth,” exploring not just romance but the different forms of love that shape young adulthood.
On the upside, Love You So Bad is not a remake—it’s a reinterpretation. It honors the emotional intensity of the original while updating its themes for today’s viewers. Bianca’s character reportedly revisits old wounds, while Dustin plays a misunderstood figure, and Will’s role mirrors his real-life personality. The casting itself is a nod to organic chemistry, born from their time on Pinoy Big Brother: Celebrity Collab Edition.
But the film also reveals the limits of our creative ecosystem. By drawing inspiration from a beloved ‘90s narrative, it risks reinforcing the very cycle it seeks to evolve. Will the love triangle offer fresh emotional stakes, or simply repackage familiar tropes with a shinier cast? Will it challenge the gender dynamics and moral binaries of its predecessor, or lean into them for dramatic payoff?
There’s also the question of balance. With two fan-favorite ships—WillCa and DusBia—competing onscreen, the film must navigate audience expectations without reducing its characters to romantic pawns. As Direk Mae herself admits, “Paano ba natin gagawing patas ang laban?”

There’s also a psychological toll. Nostalgia can create emotional stagnation. It keeps us longing for what was, instead of engaging with what is. It can romanticize unhealthy dynamics, idealize outdated gender roles, and resist necessary cultural shifts.
So what’s the alternative?
We need to honor the past without being trapped by it. That means celebrating iconic love teams while also investing in new pairings. It means rebooting classics with fresh perspectives—not just recycled scripts. It means treating nostalgia as a spice, not the main dish.
And most importantly, it means trusting the audience. Filipino viewers are ready for complexity, for nuance, for evolution. They’re ready for stories that challenge, not just comfort. For characters who reflect today’s struggles, not just yesterday’s dreams.
Nostalgia isn’t the enemy. But when it becomes the default, it’s a warning sign. It tells us we’re afraid to move forward. And in a country bursting with talent, emotion, and imagination, that fear is the real tragedy.

