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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/15966108_1258591684225589_2264714750556818602_n.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:"Look closer …"]]
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4''Smaller and Smaller Circles'' is a Filipino crime novel by journalist and media worker F. H. Batacan. Set in metropolitan Manila in [[TheNineties the summer of 1997]], it follows the adventures of a pair of Jesuit priests who moonlight as [[AmateurSleuth Amateur Sleuths]] and are sometimes asked to solve murders. The novel won the Carlos Palanca Grand Prize for the English Novel in 1999 and was first published in novella form in 2002.
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6Young boys from the slums have been turning up dead in Payatas, the largest sanitary landfill in Metro Manila. Most of them have been gruesomely murdered and eviscerated in creepily consistent fashion. But because PoliceAreUseless, the victims are nobodies, and the government places little priority on solving urban crime (or indeed on anything other than filling its higher-ups' pockets), nobody seems to notice or care that this is possibly the work of a SerialKiller... until a pair of Jesuit priests, Gus Saenz and Jerome Lucero, are brought in on the case. Saenz, with his foreign training in forensic anthropology, and Lucero, with a background in clinical psychology, put their minds together to track down the suspect, all the while dodging {{Obstructive Bureaucrat}}s within the National Bureau of Investigation and helped along on the outside by IntrepidReporter Joanna Bonifacio.
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8While the main plot focuses on the investigation into the boys' murders, ''Smaller and Smaller Circles'' also uses the investigation to remark on the role played by the Philippine government -- specifically, how skewed priorities, corruption and general government incompetence can retard practical solutions to social ills, including the investigation of violent crime.
9
10In 2015, an expanded international edition of the novel came out, adding considerable backstories and several new characters, and a [[http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/231207/filipino-crime-novel-smaller-and-smaller-circles-now-a-movie/ film adaptation]] [[TheFilmOfTheBook debuted on 6 December 2017]], produced by TBA Studios, the same outfit that made ''Film/HeneralLuna'' and ''Film/GoyoAngBatangHeneral''. The film has a significant transmedia component, including a sort of social media game where users can pretend to chat with the SerialKiller on Facebook and get various answers. The producers also released a Website/YouTube miniseries purporting to be a compilation of segments from Joanna Bonifacio's show, ''First Person'', complete with era-appropriate scan lines.
11----
12!!''Smaller and Smaller Circles'' contains examples of the following tropes:
13
14[[foldercontrol]]
15
16[[folder:In the novella]]
17* AmateurSleuth: Both priests. Fr. Saenz and Fr. Lucero are consulted by the government in murder cases due to their academic experience in forensics and the government's sore lack of in-house manpower, and despite being Jesuit priests.
18* AmbitionIsEvil: A semi-sympathetic example in the backstory of Atty. Arcinas. He grew up in a poor family of nine children, hustled his way through law school, persevered enough to pass the bar after three tries, and slowly worked his way up the Philippine civil service. He isn't quite evil, however, but is more of a selfish, arrogant PunchClockVillain and ObstructiveBureaucrat. [[spoiler:At least, until [[HeelFaceTurn his change of heart.]]]]
19* AmoralAttorney: Atty. Benjamin "Ben" Arcinas, who prefers to chase the limelight with sensational cases involving high-profile victims. He almost callously dismisses the Payatas murders and even has a generic street urchin framed for them until the next murder surfaces and bites Arcinas in the ass, seriously jeopardizing his career.
20** Oddly enough, he's never shown doing any ''actual'' legal work, even as simple as drawing up legal documents; in fact, he plays more of a detective role, albeit a fairly incompetent and self-serving one. (TruthInTelevision, as Philippine lawyers are often appointed to various government posts, at times even to positions far beyond their strict area of legal expertise and often regardless of their actual administrative ability.)
21* AuthorAvatar: Joanna Bonifacio. The RealLife Batacan is also an [[WriteWhatYouKnow investigative journalist]] by training.
22* BerserkButton:
23** Jerome being SurroundedByIdiots.
24** Emong Ricafrente having to confront his DarkAndTroubledPast [[spoiler:(he was classmates with Alex Carlos and their gym teacher used to molest them both)]].
25* BilingualBonus: Several of Joanna's phrases (in French, when speaking with Fr. Saenz) and thought processes (in Italian) are left untranslated. [[ViewersAreMorons The 2015 edition re-releases them in English.]]
26* BreakTheHaughty: Arcinas after the latest murder puts him in his place and he gets a harsh reprimand from the NBI Director.
27* CelibateHero: The priests, by definition. It's doubly hard for SexyPriest Fr. Saenz, who is consistently hit on by younger women, and thus has to keep a tight leash on his own instincts.
28* ChekhovsGun: Saenz' toothache, the victims' free dental records, as well as the shiny object Joanna notices in her crime scene footage -- which turns out to be a [[spoiler:dental instrument]].
29* ChekhovsGunman: Councillor Cesar Mariano, who sponsors free dental checkups for street children. Fr. Saenz notices one of his vans advertising these dental services … and then later figures out that the murder victims, also street children, might have had dental records thanks to Mariano's program.
30* CoolOldGuy: Fr. Saenz, who wears his hair long ("rock star hair" according to Jerome), listens to rock music, and dresses very informally compared to the quieter and more conservative Jerome.
31* CorruptBureaucrat: Played with in the case of Atty. Arcinas. Instead of bribe money, he is more interested in personal fame and popularity, which is why he prefers investigating high-profile crimes, and will only haul his ass on a case if it will make him look heroic and competent in the public eye.
32* CowboyCop: Atty. Arcinas displays shades of this—most notably, he jumps the gun by arresting the wrong suspect, which gets him a severe reprimand from [[DaChief the NBI Director]], who nearly threatens him with the NBI version of TurnInYourBadge (i.e. being fired or having his law practice revoked). He does try to get his kicks by suggesting a manhunt for the SerialKiller towards the end of the novel.
33* CollectorOfTheStrange: Saenz keeps jars of various pickled biological specimens in his lab. Occasionally he will pick up one or another from its shelf and study it.
34* CreepySouvenir: Saenz's jar collection still pales in contrast with [[spoiler:[[SerialKiller Alex Carlos]], who keeps ''his victims' organs'' in a freezer at home.]]
35* CruelAndUnusualDeath: The murder victims, of course; they're found with their organs missing and their faces ''[[TearOffYourFace peeled off]]''. [[spoiler:And this was all done with [[DepravedDentist dental instruments]]!]]
36* CunningLinguist: Joanna, who speaks ''six'' languages: besides English and Tagalog, she knows French, German, Japanese, and Italian. What's more, she switches languages in her head depending on the situation—Japanese for heavy traffic, French for annoying people, German when she needs money … and Italian for, presumably, special cases—like discovering the SerialKiller's next victim.
37* DeadpanSnarker: The priests often snark in each other's company. Joanna is also a serial offender.
38* TheDandy: Atty. Arcinas. He spends an inordinate amount of time fussing over his appearance—he puts on foundation makeup, and his hair is carefully coiffed and dyed a vivid red. In childhood he took odd jobs to save up money for a manicure at thirteen.
39** AmbiguouslyGay / CampStraight: Arcinas could be either, but his sexuality or orientation is never discussed in the novel.
40* [[spoiler: DepravedDentist: Alex Carlos, the SerialKiller, who pries his victims' faces off with his own dental tools. It's worse because he also works in a mobile clinic ''treating'' the same people for free.]]
41* DeathOfAChild: The SerialKiller's victims are poverty-stricken boys from Payatas.
42* DumbMuscle: The police and the NBI rank-and-file could count as this on an institutional scale. They may have the authority to arrest, detain and kill suspected criminals, but they're not very strategic in their thinking, and if not for the Director's foresight to call on outside expertise in the form of the priests, their collective power would still prove useless against a smart SerialKiller, at least partly because both agencies can't be bothered to solve what they perceive to be non-essential, "nobody cases" (i.e., the victims were nobodies).
43* EmptyFridgeEmptyLife: [[spoiler:Alex Carlos]] is a quiet loner, and his fridge contains nothing but an old salad, a peanut butter jar, and a few beers. [[spoiler: [[CreepySouvenir The freezer]], though, is a whole other story …]]
44* EstablishingCharacterMoment:
45** Fr. Saenz listening to deafening rock music. Often while doing autopsies. The novel even indicates his favourite bands—"Crush with Eyeliner", by {{Music/REM}}, is the first song he's depicted listening to. (In the film this was replaced with "Mata ng Diyos" by {{Music/Wolfgang}}, a Pinoy metal band.)
46** Joanna Bonifacio is introduced with a decidedly unfeminine rasp that sounds like a smoker's voice, even though she's allergic to secondhand (let alone firsthand) smoke. She often surrounds herself with smokers however (like one of her partners, as well as her cameraman).
47* EvilJesuit: An explicit {{inversion}}. Fathers Saenz and Jerome are {{The Hero}}es of this story.
48* EvilRedhead: Atty. Arcinas borders on this. His hair is dyed nearly raspberry-red, although he's less ''evil'' and more of an arrogant GloryHound.
49* FaceDeathWithDignity: [[spoiler:Alex Carlos manages a smile as the police mow him down, perhaps the only time in his sad life he could afford one.]]
50--> '''Jerome''': He smiled, Gus. Smiled before he died.
51* FreshClue: In the climactic manhunt for the SerialKiller, he leaves one final victim—No. 8—butchering him more hurriedly and only cutting off the face to send a message to the priests and the NBI.
52* FreudianExcuse: [[spoiler: Alex Carlos was raped by his gym teacher in high school, which leads to his vengeful and psychopathic actions in the present.]]
53* FriendOnTheForce: At the NBI, Ading Rustia is this to Saenz. Also the Director by extension.
54* GratuitousFrench: Joanna Bonifacio speaks in French to help her deal with annoying and self-aggrandizing people—such as [[CorruptBureaucrat Atty. Arcinas]]. Fr Saenz also knows French, so they carry on a few conversations (partly about Arcinas) in it.
55* GoryDiscretionShot: A literary example: [[spoiler: a crime-scene photographer opens Alex Carlos' [[EmptyFridgeEmptyLife fridge]] and discovers his victims' internal organs piled up inside]]. The novel describes it thus:
56--> ''The photographer stops. He brings the camera down to his chest, and stares into the [[spoiler: freezer]] for a long time.''
57--> ''Then, before the two priests can stop him, he runs, screaming, out of the apartment.''
58* GratuitousLatin: Bound to slip out from time to time given the two main protagonists are Catholic priests. At one point Fr Saenz quotes Petrarch in the original Latin.
59* HairTriggerTemper: Slightly downplayed, but this is otherwise the case for Jerome. [[BerserkButton In particular, he can't stand]] [[SurroundedByIdiots being around arrogant and/or wilfully ignorant people]], especially in positions of power—Arcinas being a prime example.
60* HeelFaceTurn: Atty. Arcinas, who goes from stonewalling the priests to helping them after he screws up badly by arresting an innocent man for the Payatas murders.
61* HolidayInCambodia: Much of the novella (and the extended novel, and the film) is set in the grim Manila slums, in particular the gigantic Payatas dumpsite.
62* IdiotBall: Arcinas carries this for much of the novel, particularly during the early half when he tries to shoo off the priests' attempts to help.
63* IgnoredExpert: Most of the higher-ups in government condescendingly dismiss Fr. Saenz's theory that serial killers do exist in the Philippines—they maintain that the SerialKiller phenomenon is restricted to the West, and to "white males in their thirties". [[note]]Ironic considering in RealLife one of the earliest documented Filipino serial killers was a Spanish-era ''priest''. (Accounts don't say though if he was a Spanish friar or a curate of a "secular" parish, i.e., an independent parish not connected with a religious order.)[[/note]]
64* InspectorLestrade: Atty. Arcinas is the particularly unhelpful type too, at least in the beginning. He becomes slightly more helpful after the NBI Director tears him a new one for screwing up the investigation. His "better" Lestrade moments come when he marshals official support to find the SerialKiller, under the priests' direction.
65* IntrepidReporter: Joanna Bonifacio, who (with good reason) seems to delight in exposing Atty. Arcinas' gaffes. This being the Philippines, however, working in media is an especially dangerous job—her father ended up becoming DeadlineNews when he went out investigating one night. She never saw him alive again.
66* JurisdictionFriction: The Quezon City police, in addition to being generally [[PoliceAreUseless useless]] at their work, can be very territorial, especially against higher authorities like the National Bureau of Investigation. According to one NBI official:
67--> '''Ading''': The QC boys get very annoyed when anyone steps on their turf.
68* LonersAreFreaks: When Jerome, Saenz, and the local authorities begin looking into the backgrounds of possible suspects, they initially dig up very little on Alex Carlos, the resident community dentist. All they know of him at first is that he is single, works efficiently and keeps to himself (even EatingLunchAlone). [[spoiler:He eventually confirms the investigators' suspicions.]]
69* {{Macguffin}}: The shiny object that reflects on the camera in Joanna's footage. [[spoiler:It turns out to be a dental instrument—the SerialKiller's signature weapon.]]
70* MassivelyNumberedSiblings: Saenz is the tallest of seven children, and Arcinas the youngest of nine. This is in sharp contrast to Jerome, Joanna, and even the SerialKiller [[spoiler:Alex Carlos]], all of whom are implied to be only children. [[note]]Averted in the 2015 edition as Joanna is revealed to have an unspecified number of sisters.[[/note]]
71* MeddlesomePatrolman: One Quezon City cop tries to shoo [[IntrepidReporter Joanna]] off the crime scene—even if she is more competent at retrieving information from it than the whole unit assigned to contain the crime scene ''combined''.
72* NoNameGiven: The NBI Director (originally; the 2015 edition gives his name as Francisco Lastimosa).
73* NoodleImplements: The shiny object that catches Joanna's attention at one crime scene, which is later determined to have made the curious marks on the victims' chin bones. [[spoiler: Fr. Saenz identifies it as the whimsically-named ''dental elevator'': [[http://www.ikasassociates.com/images/26elevators.jpg]]]]. [[note]]Not to be confused, however, with an EvilElevator, although it was certainly used for evil purposes.[[/note]]
74* ObstructiveBureaucrat: Atty. Arcinas, who siphons off resources from the Payatas murder cases and turns down the priests' assistance in order to go chasing after far more sensational crimes. Never mind that his own boss asked them to help him with the said murders—UngratefulBastard, indeed.
75** In his defence, even Arcinas thinks (however mistakenly) that: a) the Director will agree with him that the Bureau can conclude the investigation without the priests' help; and b) the street urchin he framed might actually be the murderer (although the former could just be Arcinas trying to throw the priests off, and the latter is mostly Jerome's speculation).
76** Subverted by a few other government workers, the NBI Director most of all. The novel pointedly goes on to state that he is something of a rarity in the Philippine government, precisely because he is remarkably [[ConsummateProfessional competent and honest]]. In fact it is because of this that the Director found it difficult to get good appointments in a public sector crawling with [[ObstructiveBureaucrat Obstructive Bureaucrats]], [[CorruptBureaucrat Corrupt Bureaucrats]], and [[{{Nepotism}} friends and family of incumbent politicians]].
77* OhCrap: A surprisingly subdued reaction from Atty. Arcinas when another murder is reported ''after'' his men have arrested the alleged suspect. (Although it's strongly implied he did most of his freaking out "off camera", that is, immediately after he hears about the new murder and realises he's going to catch it from the NBI Director. Which he does.)
78* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[spoiler:Alex Carlos]] gruesomely murders [[spoiler:the teacher who raped him in high school]].
79* PoliceAreUseless: A defining theme in the novel. In at least one murder, the Quezon City police do nothing to process or contain the crime scene properly, and as a result, a vital piece of evidence goes missing, possibly stolen by locals for scrap. Luckily for IntrepidReporter Joanna, her camera footage of the scene is ''just'' clear enough for Fr. Saenz to later identify the evidence as [[spoiler: [[DepravedDentist a dental instrument]]]].
80* PoliceBrutality: Jerome suspects this is how local police extracted a FalseConfession out of Carding, the generic offender whom Atty. Arcinas frames for the serial murders.
81* RapeAsBackstory: [[spoiler: Alex's gym teacher in high school rapes and otherwise sexually abuses him and his classmates. This prompts Alex's StartOfDarkness.]]
82** Jerome is subtly implied to have suffered this—the hints include his almost-imperceptible limp, as well as his otherwise inexplicable psychological connection with the murdered boys and his dreams involving their killer. The 2015 edition plays up this connection some more. He was also rather small, thin, and quiet in his youth, much like [[spoiler:Alex Carlos himself]].
83* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: The NBI Director, who actually sees the killings as a serious threat, and even chews out Atty. Arcinas for screwing up the investigation. Councillor Mariano as well, who lends his own time and resources (in this case the free dental services he sponsors for street urchins) to help identify the murder victims.
84* RewindReplayRepeat: How Joanna Bonifacio discovers the possible murder weapon—she notices a bright flash in the video footage of a crime scene and reviews it over and over, and later prints out a frame. Fr. Saenz later confirms it to be [[spoiler:a dental elevator [[http://i00.i.aliimg.com/photo/v0/101409070/Dental_Root_Elevator.jpg]], which normally is used to pull out teeth by the roots, but which the SerialKiller uses to ''remove his victims' faces'']].
85* RoomFullOfCrazy: More accurately, a [[spoiler: ''Fridge'' Full of Crazy, which is where Alex Carlos stores his victims' internal organs. Overlaps with CannibalLarder except he doesn't eat them]].
86* SadistTeacher: [[spoiler: Alex Carlos' gym teacher sexually abused him and his other boy classmates. Unsurprisingly Alex later murders said teacher in revenge.]]
87* [[ScrewPolitenessImASenior Screw Politeness, I'm a Senior!]]: A very mild example PlayedForLaughs: Saenz often snatches Jerome's food or coffee out of his hands and finishes it off. Jerome is mostly cool with it because he has very great respect for the elder priest, who is his best friend and TheMentor to him besides.
88* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: A heroic version: Joanna bypasses the [[ObstructiveBureaucrat NBI]]'s snail-paced background check on murder suspect [[spoiler:[[DepravedDentist Alex Carlos]]]] by talking to her friends in City Hall, who are quickly able to provide her the pertinent information—"a one-woman NBI", as Jerome puts it.
89* SexyPriest: Fr. Saenz is one—TallDarkAndHandsome, even when he's [[SilverFox pushing sixty]]. Even he suspects a good number of his parishioners aren't there for his sermons, and a young female dentist flirts with him even as she's pulling out his teeth—and he is ''terrified'' of dentists.
90* SmugSnake: Atty. Arcinas, who preens for the public during major investigations and is so convinced he's caught the SerialKiller that he brushes off the priests' attempts to help him (as requested, in fact, by ''Arcinas''' boss, the NBI Director)—so that when another murder turns up, the Director gives him hell for turning the priests down, and Arcinas spends the rest of the novel meekly following the priests' instructions.
91** AnimalMotifs: He is even compared to a snake at one point: the book frequently calls attention to his blank, languid, reptilian eyes, and explicitly says that Arcinas "[[EvilLawyerJoke has always reminded Jerome of a rattlesnake, small-brained, treacherous, venomous]]."
92* SuicideByCop: [[spoiler: Saenz and Jerome guess this is how Alex Carlos wants to die. They're right.]]
93* SurroundedByIdiots: Well, one idiot in particular: this is Jerome's reaction whenever he's in Atty. Arcinas' presence. Still, it's an implied character trait of his—the novel even describes him as "the type that does not suffer fools gladly".
94* TearOffYourFace: What the SerialKiller does to his victims before he carves out their organs. This is in fact one of the oldest tricks in his book—he performed it on his first victim, [[spoiler: the SadistTeacher who raped him in high school]].
95* TheToothHurts: Saenz hates going to dentists with a passion. It doesn't help that [[spoiler: the SerialKiller is one—although this proves helpful to the investigation, as Saenz finds a replica of the murder weapon in a dental clinic]]. Either way, Saenz is due for a dental appointment, since he has an enormous cavity that's been needing attention for several months.
96* UnreliableNarrator: In-universe. Other news reporters regularly fudge the details of the case; for instance, they label Fr. Saenz as a ''doctor'' and Jerome as a ''criminal'', not a ''clinical'', psychologist.
97* UnsportsmanlikeGloating: Jerome ''badly'' wants to do this to Atty. Arcinas. Though considering how badly the latter blundered on the SerialKiller investigation …
98--> '''Saenz''': If he does ask, will you be nice?
99--> '''Jerome''': Goodness, no.
100--> '''Saenz''': [''sighs''] I had to ask. Diplomatic at least?
101--> '''Jerome''': Can I gloat for 5 minutes?
102--> '''Saenz''': ''A child died to prove us right.''
103--> '''Jerome''': [''thinks''] All right. Three minutes.
104--> '''Saenz''': One.
105--> '''Jerome''': Two.
106--> '''Saenz''': Done.
107* WouldHurtAChild: The SerialKiller, obviously … [[spoiler:but also his PE teacher, his first victim]].
108* WronglyAccused: Carding, a run-of-the-mill poor young man, is initially arrested by Arcinas' men for the murders. Discussed by the priests who speculate that the police simply framed him by detaining a generic sex offender, asking leading questions and [[PoliceBrutality roughing him up a little]].
109[[/folder]]
110
111[[folder:In the 2015 re-cut edition (including new instances of previous tropes)]]
112* AdaptationExpansion: Several characters are added to this edition, including clergymen (Cardinal Meneses, Fr Ramirez) and NBI operatives (Deputy Directors Jake Valdes and Philip Mapa). A number of new chapters also flesh out backstories and additional plot scenes, such as Director Lastimosa's heart attack and flight to the US for surgery.
113* AtTheOperaTonight: The priests go to the Cultural Centre of the Philippines—ostensibly for a Mozart concerto, but actually to meet Mrs Iwasaki, the Japanese head of the foundation financing their research. This being the Philippines, a lot of high-society figures are also seen visibly milling about, showing off their baroque finery and judging others'. NBI Director Lastimosa and his family are also in attendance, as is the sinister Cardinal Meneses.
114** A bit of an ExaggeratedTrope: while most instances of the trope take place while the performance plays in the background, in this case the performance isn't even needed except as a pretext to get several characters together; all the relevant scenes happen in the lobby before it even begins.
115** Setting up the scene in such a way that the performance was never actually depicted had a very practical benefit in the film adaptation, as it saved the production crew the whole expense of awaiting or staging an entire performance just for the sake of the movie.
116* BigShutUp: Director Lastimosa delivers this to the NBI official who signed off on Arcinas' CowboyCop arrest on the flimsiest of evidence, when said official tried to suck up to him by trying to pin all the blame on Arcinas himself. Said official's name is …
117* CorruptBureaucrat: Deputy Director Philip Mapa, Arcinas' chief patron at the NBI.
118* {{Expy}}: Rafael Cardinal Meneses of real-life Jaime Cardinal Sin; like Sin, Meneses is said to have spearheaded social opposition to the Marcos dictatorship. That's about his only redeeming quality, however.
119* ForensicAccounting: How Msgr. Ramirez gets caught. The NBI, Director Lastimosa in particular, do some digging into his financial status and figure out that the money intended to support his charity has instead gone into his personal expenses -- resulting in some fairly expensive properties, including a BigFancyHouse attended to by "volunteers" from his orphanage (which Saenz suspects are the ones he is currently molesting).
120* GoodIsNotNice: Councillor Mariano angrily reprimands the priests for lying about their reasons for paying him a visit, even if the priests genuinely felt it was necessary to bend the truth to keep the case from spiralling out of hand.
121* ILetGwenStacyDie: [[spoiler:In the end, Alex's death haunted Fr. Saenz, who admits to having wanted to save him after learning of his DarkAndTroubledPast. To this end he relentlessly pursued to bring Msgr. Ramirez to justice lest he indirectly create more people like Alex Carlos.]]
122* ImYourBiggestFan: Rommel Salustiano is this to Saenz. Possibly literally as he looks to weigh somewhere around 300 pounds. His odd, vaguely creepy habit of butting in on Saenz's work sets him up to be considered as a possible suspect, even though he doesn't fit the SerialKiller's profile (at least, not physically).
123* JusticeByOtherLegalMeans: Because Ramirez is protected by Church protocol which forces him to transfer parishes for misdemeanor, allowing him to continue with his pedophile activity, Fr. Saenz and Dir. Lastimosa use ForensicAccounting to bypass that immunity, exposing his money laundering scheme to cause a legal case for which the Church can offer no protection. Lastimosa even uses UsefulNotes/AlCapone's case to illustrate his plan.
124* LawfulStupid: Cardinal Meneses is keen on maintaining Church protocol through transferring Msgr. Ramirez to protect him from molestation charges as disciplinary measure. In the epilogue, he berates Saenz for breaking with tradition by helping the NBI bust Ramirez for good; Saenz simply retorts that it ''is'' his insistence on this trope that is endangering the Church's reputation.
125* MoneyDearBoy: InUniverse, both Fr. Saenz and Dir. Lastimosa rue the fact that they had to use ForensicAccounting to finally bring Msgr. Ramirez to justice. By exposing his laundering scheme, his financial backers would not only turn on him, but also set in motion legal action beyond the Church's reach, indirectly allowing them to finally press on with their own molestation case.
126* NamedByTheAdaptation: Francisco Lastimosa, the NBI Director.
127** Several other characters known only by one name in the original novella also get full names: for instance, Carding, the initial suspect, is given the full name Ricardo Navato.
128* PedophilePriest: Father Isagani Ramirez, who (per the Catholic Church's usual means of damage control) has been shuffled around several parishes pending allegations of sexual molestation of children.
129* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: NBI Deputy Director Jake Valdes, who like Director Lastimosa, Ading Rustia, and Councillor Mariano, actually considers the Payatas murders a serious concern.
130* RedHerring: [[spoiler:Carding is the fairly obvious one. Rommel Salustiano, however, is an unconventional example.]]
131* SinisterMinister: Cardinal Meneses, who is shielding Msgr. Ramirez from legal or disciplinary action following accusations that the latter abused several orphans at his last posting. Also Msgr. Ramirez himself obviously.
132* TyrantTakesTheHelm: Atty. Arcinas when he takes over the Payatas investigations from Director Lastimosa, after the latter's incapacitation from a heart attack. He's not really ''tyrannical'' per se, but acts in a stubborn, unilateral manner by launching his own investigation, which leads to [[WronglyAccused Carding's arrest]].
133* WhamLine: [[spoiler:"He was murdered in his apartment." —Jake Valdes on Isabelo Gorospe, Alex Carlos' high school P.E. teacher.]]
134* WouldHurtAChild: [[spoiler:Aside from the SerialKiller Alex Carlos and his former gym teacher, Msgr. Ramirez in this edition.]]
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:In the film]]
138* TwentyMinutesIntoThePast
139* AdaptationDistillation: Due to the interests of time, several plot elements (particularly from the longer 2015 edition) have been considerably shortened, simplified, or removed altogether, only hinted at in passing. The subplot involving [[spoiler:Msgr. Ramirez's orphanage abuses and embezzlement from a connected charity]] is reduced and resolved before the Payatas cases wrap up, and Joanna's backdoor approach to doing a background check on [[spoiler:Alex Carlos]] is cut out entirely.
140* AdaptationalAttractiveness: Slightly in the case of Joanna Bonifacio, and at least according to Filipino (read: Western-influenced) beauty standards. To wit:
141** The novel hints that she isn't terribly thin—she gripes (good-naturedly) about needing a liposuction budget, and her crew joke about her being curvy and various politically-correct euphemisms for fatness, and she has a raspy voice that reminds people of smokers or drag queens.
142** The film has a slender, more angular, light-skinned Joanna, played by the mixed-race Carla Humphries, who has strong facial features and no trace of a rasp.
143* AdaptationalSexuality: In his brief cameo, Rommel Salustiano appears to have been given the behaviour and accent of the stereotypical Filipino CampGay, something not evident in the novel. Done at least partly for ComicRelief (at one point he hits on Jerome).
144* AdaptationalUgliness: Film!Saenz (played by Nonie Buencamino) is not ''ugly'', per se, but he's not necessarily a standout looker the way his novel counterpart is, with the latter's exceptional height, sharp features, long, stringy grey hair and fondness for youthful T-shirts; the former looks more generally average, and dresses more conservatively as well. See AbilityOverAppearance.
145* AdaptationalDyeJob: Atty. Arcinas does not have the weird, vividly red coiffure he sports in the novel, just regular black hair, albeit rather long (around shoulder-length). Joanna points out that "he got his curls back" instead of "he dyed his hair again", as in the book.
146** It could be the lighting, but Saenz's hair looks slightly darker than the obvious salt-and-pepper greyness it was in the book. It's also short and neatly combed, unlike his book version's long "rockstar" 'do.
147* AdaptedOut: NBI official Ading Rustia, and Tato Ampil, Saenz's guitar-playing, surfer-dude-accented assistant.
148* AnachronismStew: Some small examples:
149** Some of the buildings featured in the background of the ''First Person'' shots were built after 1997, though they're not focused on and are not iconic enough, being treated as generic skyscrapers.
150** Tess Mariano's campaign video urges would-be voters to find her name at "No. 46 on the ballot". This was not a common practice in TheNineties. [[note]]Up to the late 2000s, election ballots listed the names of candidates and party-lists (basically small political parties) in alphabetical order, leading to a huge rash of new, and often ridiculous-sounding, party-lists using the letter A or the number 1 as initials (e.g. Akbayan, Ako Bicol, [=1Pacman=], 1-UTAK, etc.), all jockeying for the top slots on each ballot. The 2013 general election changed the rules by randomising the order of party-list and candidate names. In response, party-list candidates started directing their constituents to find their names by indicating where they appeared on the ballot.[[/note]] [[note]]The campaign ad misses other details though: Mariano is running as a city councillor for her district, ''not'' as a national party-list representative. District candidates are ''still'' listed alphabetically, and even in the 2010s, all told, Quezon City (where Mariano is implied to be running) had a total of 36 councillors, and likely less in the 1990s. Higher assigned numbers tend to appear when electing party-lists, since there's a large number of them competing on the national level, and all of them have to be listed on the ballot.[[/note]]
151* {{Chiaroscuro}}: Many scenes are shot in extreme contrast, with low-key lighting and strong hints of saturated colour. Drives home the intense FilmNoir inspiration of the movie as well as its source.
152* CreatorCameo: Original author F. H. Batacan shows up as one of the [[AtTheOperaTonight Cultural Centre of the Philippines crowd]].
153* DarkIsNotEvil: The priests wear black or other dark colours most of the time, but their expertise helps solve the case.
154* DemotedToExtra: [[CorruptBureaucrat Deputy Director Philip Mapa]] was at best a supporting character in the 2015 release of the novel, but in the movie he only really gets two scenes: Director Lastimosa warning him not to publicise the case, and Lastimosa later chewing him (and Arcinas) out when the seventh murder happens whilst [[WronglyAccused Carding]] is in custody.
155* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Alex Carlos in this version. He stabs himself to death after stabbing Fr Saenz. He also appears to have slashed himself along the jawline prior to Saenz' arrival, as though partially repeating the boys' facial removal on himself.]]
156* EnsembleCast: Starring Nonie Buencamino, Sid Lucero, Carla Humphries, Bembol Roco, Christopher de Leon among others, all noted big names in Philippine entertainment (and in some cases, in theatre).
157* FatBastard: Cardinal Meneses is noticeably rotund and has a physically large presence compared to either Fr. Gus or Jerome.
158%% * TheFilmOfTheBook
159* GenderFlip: With AdaptationalNameChange as a side effect.
160** Councillor Mariano. In the book, a man named Cesar; in the movie, a woman named Tess.
161** Dr Santa Romana. In the book, a woman named Jeannie; in the movie, a young man named Gino. [[spoiler:(This might actually help pin him as a possible suspect, since he resembles the priests' profile of the killer—youngish adult, rather small and thin, and often works in the health centre and mobile dental clinic. Interestingly, Jeannie in the book also asks point blank if she is being suspected.)]]
162* GratuitousEnglish: Long stretches of conversations throughout the film are in unbroken English, in part to accommodate the technical terms inherently used in fields like criminology, law enforcement, and the forensic sciences, in part because many of the characters are educated types from the middle classes upward, likely conditioned to speak English wherever possible, except in the most informal of situations. It's little surprise that what Tagalog or Taglish is used, is often used most by slum-dwellers themselves and any professionals who need to talk to them directly.
163* GratuitousFrench: Saenz' and Joanna's French conversations are retained in the film.
164%% * TheGhost: Msgr Ramirez.
165* LightIsNotGood: Cardinal Meneses in his tropical white cassock, in stark contrast to Fr Gus and Fr Jerome, who mostly wear black.
166* SexyPriest: Apparently Fr Jerome is handsome enough that CampGay Rommel Salustiano finds himself hitting on him—and is not shy about talking about it.
167* ShowWithinAShow: ''First Person'', Joanna Bonifacio's investigative-reportage show, compiled and "released" on [=YouTube=]. Each episode covers one of the several boys who became serial-killing victims at the dumpsite.
168%% * StairwellChase
169[[/folder]]
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