Night of the Split is Filipino folk horror with investigative grit, where journalism meets a monster that never left the stories.
Manila reporter Elena Navarro follows a missing-person tip into Barangay Malas, finds a bloodied sandal in a dead-end alley called Kalsada Demonyo, and hears an inhuman shriek split the night. The old word comes back in a whisper: Manananggal - a "splitter" that leaves its lower half steeped in vinegar, takes wing, and hunts hearts and unborn children.
As Elena digs, her trail cuts through flooded slums, cramped newsrooms, and midnight wet markets that reek of brine and blood. She meets Mang Ruel, a weaver with a stingray-barbed whip and a wife the stories never gave back, and uncovers a family secret that began in San Isidro, 1978. Each interview peels back another layer of silence. Each scream the city tries to swallow makes her own ribs ache like something inside her is trying to wake.
The more evidence she gathers, the less the case feels like a story and the more it feels like an inheritance. To end the killings, Elena must choose between protecting her bloodline and exposing a truth that could turn the whole barangay against her.
Inside the story
An on-the-ground investigation through Manila's alleys, slums, and night markets
Rule-bound folklore: vinegar, salt, sun, and severed legs as real constraints, not decoration
Set pieces that hit: the dead-end alley at Kalsada Demonyo, a storm-lashed shack and the sting of a blessed whip, a market hunt where the smell gives the lair away, and a final choice between family and truth
Generational secrets that tie a rural tragedy in San Isidro to an urban hunt decades later
Read if you like
Folk horror that respects the rules and culture it invokes
Urban journalism thrillers where sources lie, evidence bleeds, and the city is a character
Stories about inheritance, shame, and breaking curses that do not break you first
Content notes
Graphic violence, body horror, pregnancy peril, grief, religious folk practice, and systemic poverty. The narrative condemns exploitation and honors victims and culture bearers.
If you want a rule-true nightmare that turns folklore into evidence, step into the storm, follow the smell of vinegar, and face the wings hunting above the alleys in Night of the Split.