It took ten years before Katski got to direct her second film. In between, she did teleseryes for ABS-CBN like "Mana Po" and "Lumayo Ka Man Sa Akin". Her last soap was "A Beautiful Affair", which didn't go the way the ABS-CBN bosses envisioned it, so she was replaced and was never made to helm a teleserye again. We don't know why she chose a horror film like "Pagsanib" as her comeback vehicle as it's hard to make a fright flick that really works. The story is written by Erik Matti (of "Seklusyon) and the script is by Charlene Esguerra.
The story centers on a policewoman who looks more like a supermodel, Ruth Liwanag (Sarah Lahbati). She moves to this small town called Dalisay trying to run away from the traumatic memory of something in her recent past that will only be revealed in the ending. She has just arrived in town when she sees a young woman, the eponymous Leah (Shy Carlos), jumping off the balcony of their house.
Despite the fall, Leah miraculously survives and she's blamed for a violent attack on her longtime yaya, Rosario. Leah and Rosario both end up in the same hospital. But why did Leah try to kill Rosario? Is she possessed by an evil spirit?

That "Pagsanib" also comes from the fertile imagination of Erik Matti is easy to deduce since it has the same theme of his "Seklusyon", with the devil playing on men's weaknesses for them to do heinous, diabolical deeds that will make anyone cringe.

Sarah Lahbati does pretty well in the lead role, consistently stoic and courageous all throughout but haunted by her own demons that make her cut her own thighs and belly with a knife. You'd believe that even the evil spirit who lurks around will be afraid of her because she's so fearless. In the dark library sequence where the spook appears and she pursues it, it's even the ghost who seem to get scared and tries to run away from her because of her fierce no-nonsense aura.

Nothing much is required from Shy Carlos at the start, but when she finally manifests the signs that she's indeed possessed, she gets convincingly transformed into an evil entity worthy of being the film's title-roler.
Katski works really hard in creating a creepy and ominous atmosphere of doom throughout the movie. Most scenes are shot in the dark, but sometimes, her techniques get repetitive, like the frequent flickering of the lights and the pervasive whispering voices we hear that utter gibberish for added fright factor. But the thing is, we don't get really scared at all.
As someone behind said as we were going out of the theatre: "Hindi naman ako natakot." Maybe she should have put some jump scare scenes, no matter how cheap they are, as local viewers who go for the horror genre just loved being jolted out of their seats.
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