The film also critiques the Catholic concept of original sin . When Father Ben refuses Pipoy communion, stating, "Your soul is mortgaged to the other side," the director holds the shot for a full forty seconds of silence. It is an indictment of institutional cruelty disguised as theology. The first "Inosenteng Nilalang" (2021) was a slow-burn character study, with Pipoy as a mute child (played by child actor Kairo Suarez). That film ended ambiguously, with a shadow creeping across the bedroom wall.
The final shot is Pipoy standing under the sun, shadowless, smiling faintly. A voiceover from Father Ben says: "We prayed for deliverance. God delivered him into oblivion. Perhaps that is mercy." pipoy anak ni pepito -inosenteng nilalang 2-
Instead of gratitude, the village brands him a tiyanak -touched creature. The local priest, Father Ben, delivers a horrifically nuanced sermon: "Even the Devil quotes scripture to the innocent." He argues that saving the child was a trick. That the demon inside Pipoy wants trust, not terror. The film also critiques the Catholic concept of original sin
Pipoy, eyes filled with tired tears, raises the blade. But he does not cut his shadow. Instead, he drops the machete and whispers the film’s most devastating line: "Mas masakit pa rin ang ginagawa ninyo sa akin noon pa man." ("What you have been doing to me all along hurts more.") The first "Inosenteng Nilalang" (2021) was a slow-burn
Part 2 amps the tension by giving Pipoy a voice. And what a voice it is. Napoles’ Pipoy speaks sparingly, but when he does, it is philosophical prose: "Ang anino ay hindi ang kaluluwa. Ngunit sinabi ninyo na kung walang anino ay hindi tao. Kung gayon, ako ba ay multo?" ("The shadow is not the soul. But you said without a shadow, there is no person. So then, am I a ghost?")