Chatting with Joel is like watching efficiency artwork. One second he’s shiny and expansive, the following timid, quiet, withdrawn. Effectively, he’s an actor in any case, a multi-awarded one at that, within the Philippines and internationally, who boasts a dizzying record of accomplishments in his 56-year profession.
Joel was 7 when stage and movie director Peque Gallaga noticed him in a play of their hometown, Bacolod. Peque instantly walked over to their home and requested for Joel.
As he recollects the encounter, Joel turns into that bright-eyed, bushy-tailed 7-year-old, grinning up at an ominous Peque. Then he turns into Peque, wanting down by his gruff full beard saying, “You’re going to be in my subsequent play,” pointing a finger at Joel.
Then Joel is the 7-year previous once more, agog, furiously nodding and grinning like an keen pet, “Okaaay.” That was the start of a long time of mentoring with Peque.
In college, Joel studied superior appearing beneath Peque and carried out with the St. Genesius Guild. Saint who?
“St. Genesius! The patron saint of actors!” evident incredulously at me. “He has an fascinating story. He was a Roman actor who later was martyred as a Christian,” and Joel opens his arms and appears to the sky as if he had seen the second coming. I may nearly hear a choir of angels. I felt like a Philistine.
Comes Oro, Plata, Mata directed by Peque, and Joel was launched to Philippine cinema as Miguel Lorenzo, in what he describes because the awkward, kinda sickly teenager (at the least that’s what he seemed to be) however no, he was 21 on the time. Good appearing.
Methodology appearing. Peque was a eager follower of Eric Morris, an appearing coach who developed the “Morris Method” within the ‘60s, encouraging actors to faucet into their very own experiences and feelings to create genuine performances.
Well-known American actors recognized to make use of this specific appearing self-discipline embody Daniel Day-Lewis, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Al Pacino. Joel Torre deserves to be named amongst them.
“I owe lots to Peque. He has all the time been my inspiration. He all the time used to say, “Hindi puwede ang puwede na (By no means accept simply ok).”

In Oro, we witness Miguel’s metamorphosis from a gawky teen to a mature younger man on the finish of the film, however not earlier than we watch the Sam Peckinpah-like blood tub the place Miguel and Hermes Mercurio (Ronnie Lazaro) invade and bloodbath nearly each dwelling creature within the rogue gangster camp.
We witness a horrifying Miguel, half bare, dripping in blood and sweat, eyes of a hysterical madman, his hand shaking, straining to tug the set off at his sufferer. One nearly has to look away on the sight of this monster. The place does rage come from?
“I used to be so younger on the time and I needed to dig deep to search out that in me.”
Most notable works? Lav Diaz’s Batang West Facet, Marilou Diaz Abaya’s Karnal, Mike de Leon’s Bayaning third World. Sure, he’s labored with Filipino administrators royalty.
Benedict Mique’s Lolo and the Child was launched by Netflix in 2024 and rated No. 1 in 38 international locations with over 8 million views worldwide with 3.5 million views inside per week in August final yr.
And what about Eric Matti’s On The Job? Joel’s character Tatang Maghari is a hitman who’s allowed to depart jail to tackle assassination ‘jobs” and jail guards permit him again in. They’re all in on it.
“That’s scary.”
“And it’s a real story,” Joel continues. “A pal mentioned they’ve the identical in Mexico. They’re referred to as ‘vampires.’”


When informed that his Tatang character has “a really even temper,” Joel agreed, saying “it’s an fascinating commentary.”
“Tatang didn’t have any excessive feelings. I considered myself as an inanimate object, no emotions, no feelings. I’m a Bushido blade,” and Joel places his palms collectively to his temple, along with his eyes intently squarely, steadily taking a look at me.
And his palms clasp round an imaginary deal with of a sword, “and like a Samurai, I can take your head off with a flick of a wrist.”
And he flicks his wrists and ack! I clutch my pearls. My pores and skin crawls throughout.
I wanted a few beats to recuperate.
Joel shares, “I really interviewed a number of inmates and considered one of them really admitted he was successful man. He was a small man, actually scrawny.”
And Joel is slowly shrinking earlier than my very eyes. “‘I’m only a small man,’ he says, ‘so I can disguise beneath a bench whereas ready for my sufferer.’”
And there’s Joel, small, scrawny, beneath the bench.
“That’s scary. He may very well be the neighborhood tricycle driver. Murderer pala!”
At this level, Joel provides a beer and a few of that well-known JT’s Manukan rooster inasal.
Gladly.
Which brings us to his second ardour. Movie being the primary, and meals an equal second.
“I wanted a fallback. Actors work for 3 months and have to attend one other three months for the following job. So, we, (along with his spouse Christy) began JT’s Manukan on Might 3, 2003,” he shares.
“It was a hole-in-the-wall throughout the LVN studios. I felt like a GRO in these days. Sweating over the grill, chatting with clients, and our eating space was the driveway, which was slanted so, everybody needed to eat at an angle,” he chuckles on the reminiscence, “and with sufficient beer….” and Joel slumps over with amusing.

To be native is to be foremost international. The identical holds true for movies and films.
– Joel Torre
Why inasal? Effectively, it’s the signature dish of Bacolod, after all.
“Mommy had a cloud kitchen lengthy earlier than cloud kitchens grew to become a factor. She used to cook dinner and other people would deliver their pimbreras, , these metallic stackable meals containers,” he recollects.
“My father was a sugar dealer after which the sugar disaster hit. Mommy’s enterprise stored us collectively and he or she despatched all 13 of us to highschool. And good colleges at that.”
“I used to hold across the kitchen lots,” Joel provides. “My favorites had been croquettas and fabada. Habichuelas, proper?” Sure, a private childhood favourite as nicely.
“After I wished to go to the films, mommy would say, ‘wrap some lumpia first.’ That’s the place I realized the worth of laborious work,” he shares.
And there’s Joel, a child along with his small fingers rolling up some lumpia. After which, he slaps his hand and provides up an open palm with that pet canine grin, “’Now can I’ve my 5 pesos?’ What mommy may resist that.”
So what’s subsequent? “Two motion pictures developing and a teleserye to be shot at a resort,” he glistens on the prospect.
And his empire? “Empire?!” he scoffs.
Effectively, what would you name 38 branches? “Forty really, with two in Singapore and one in Dubai.”
“I need JT’s to develop into a heritage restaurant sometime. Like Max, ,” Joel muses, along with his salt and pepper hair and crisp, powder blue linen shirt.
I went dwelling with a few baggage of JT’s Manukan specials, laing, pinangat, sisig, liempo, rooster, and to borrow a line from Bridget Jones, a little bit of a crush. – Rappler.com