AKA Tinikling
Starring Jennifer Beals, Luc Merenda, Patrick Bauchau, Behn Cervantes, Pilar Pilapil, Christa Lang, Reginald Singh, Alfredo De la Fuente, Antony Tan, Dodie Lacuna, Chabeng Contreras, Nanding Josef, Ray Ventura, Ernie Zarate, Samuel Fuller
Directed by Samuel Fuller
Expectations: Low.
The Madonna and the Dragon is the final feature-length film to come from director Sam Fuller, and it’s also the first of his films since White Dog to feel like a Fuller film throughout. Produced for French TV, it’s not generally included in his filmography for some reason — even the list of his works in his own autobiography leaves it off — but it’s definitely a worthwhile film that should be seen by Fuller fans. It combines many of Fuller’s noted trademarks into one movie: the streetwise kid, social commentary, stock footage used to lend credibility and realism to the film, journalism, etc.
The Madonna and the Dragon is set around the People Power Revolution that happened in the mid-’80s in the Philippines. During this time in their history, the Filipino people rose up in revolution against the authoritarian government that had been oppressing them for the last 20 or so years. Fuller’s film focuses on a pair of photo journalists hoping to capture some great images of the revolution. They find themselves in a world of poverty, where kids ride garbage trucks to scavenge whatever they can find, and everyone is potentially double-crossing you behind your back.
It’s not every day that a low-budget TV movie can serve as both a history lesson and as an entertaining film that delivers explosions, gun battles and kidnapping intrigue. The Madonna and the Dragon definitely pulls both off well. Unfortunately, the historical aspects aren’t fully explained so if you’re unfamiliar you’ll have to fill in some gaps yourself, but as this was made only three years after the election it documents, I imagine in its day people wouldn’t have needed as much handholding with the specifics. The realism of the film is bolstered considerably during a few scenes when Fuller utilizes stock footage of the actual political rallies. There’s one street rally sequence that is especially effective, as the photo journalists are there to cover the event and through them we are there to experience it, with actual stock footage bringing it to vivid, realistic life. This blend is an interesting one, and it remains one of the most intriguing techniques Fuller used in his films. At times, it creates something that transcends fiction and becomes more of a docudrama.
The Madonna and the Dragon is ultimately not a great Fuller film, but it’s definitely my pick for the best film he made post-White Dog. If nothing else, it’s definitely a film that Fuller fans would enjoy, so hopefully with so many recent re-releases from Fuller’s back catalog, we can hope that a proper release of this one will see the light of day.