Lt. Abel Ibarra (Gerald Anderson), a leader of an elite sniper group, protects his family from a man who plots a revenge to kill him and his love ones after accomplishing mission. Ibarra went on an absence without leave to make an investigation on a crime himself.[2]
Plot
In the opening, a foreign terrorist Saheed executes a bound man after taking a bagful of money. Abel, alongside his team was inserted to neutralize the foreign terrorist. The mission is successful, but the terrorist committed suicide.
Back at a restaurant, during their celebration of a fellow team member's child's christening, a bomb explodes just as Abel and his wife exits, killing all his team members. An old man berated his men for their failure. He swore justice upon his fellows. He tried to plead for clues, but his superior was mum about it, instead giving it to a police officer. Later that night, a group of men attacked his house, killing the guards, but neutralized. Abel sustained a wound on the assault. In the hospital, he tried to extract info on a surviving suspect, but an assassin disguised as a nurse, killed him, then fled.
The military listed him as AWOL. Then he investigated the incident, his way. He went on assassinating his enemies one by one. First, an escaped convict named Mallari who pointed a rogue policeman Delgado. Then Delgado was killed at his hideout after he took call from Amang's (Bembol Roco) subordinate Victor (Bernard Palanca). He died trying to take a child hostage, but he blurted that Abel's team eliminated Amang's son Armando, who was with Saheed's side, who dies when he committed suicide by grenade. He thwarts an attempt on his family's life, killing the same assassin who attacked him on the hospital, then threatens Amang over the assassin's phone.
Then Abel went on to Amang's hideout, kills his lackeys, then kills Amang after a confrontation. He returns to his family, and his superior officer covered up his tracks, saying that the AWOL status was a miscommunication.
Before the film ends, he killed Victor painfully, by shooting him limb by limb and finally shooting him on the head, and calls his wife that he is coming home. The policeman who investigates the assassinations walks out of the crime scene after an investigation.
AWOL was directed by Enzo Williams. Williams meant to use the film as to promote appreciation for the Philippines' soldiers by Filipinos similar to Americans' positive treatment to its soldiers as observed by Williams.[3]