Directed by Mika Kaurismäki
Expectations: Moderately high.
Tigrero: A Film That Was Never Made is a gift to Sam Fuller fans, and not of much interest to those that aren’t. It chronicles the 1993 journey of Sam Fuller and Jim Jarmusch to the jungles of Brazil to find the Karajá people who Sam Fuller met and filmed in the mid-1950s. He was sent there by Darryl F. Zanuck to scout for a film called Tigrero, which was to star John Wayne, but ultimately the picture was scrapped due to the insurance costs being too high. Fuller, frustrated with the bullshit involved with getting the picture off the ground with the studio, threw himself into his work on the screenplay for Run of the Arrow.
If I was more focused with these Sam Fuller reviews, maybe I’d have done this in order after House of Bamboo, which was when Fuller initially went to Brazil. Oh well, them’s the breaks! The work on the unfilmed movie Tigrero accounts for the lack of a Fuller film in 1956, but he made up for it big time with three releases in 1957! Some of the footage he filmed for Tigrero ultimately found its way into Shock Corridor as the dream sequences, but other than that it would seem that the experience was a waste of his time.
All of Fuller’s desires do indeed come true, as even through the language barriers, some of the villagers recognize him and his trademark cigars. Even more interesting, though, are the people who don’t specifically remember him, but remember the people on the film that have since died. One man is spiritually moved upon seeing his father, telling Fuller later that watching the footage made it feel like, “He was alive again.”
Now since this is subtitled “A Film That Was Never Made,” they do delve into what Tigrero the ’50s film was to be. It would’ve opened in traditional slam-bang Fuller style, depicting a brutal circle of life in the animal kingdom. A white bird lands on the surface of a river. A crocodile slowly swims over and grabs the bird in its mouth. Soon after, another croc comes and fights the first for the bird. While that’s happening, the camera follows the spread of the blood in the water to a school of piranhas, who then swim over and devour the crocodiles, leaving only their bones in their wake. Finally, a white bird swoops in, snags a piranha out of the water, and a gigantic TIGRERO comes on-screen. Now that’s how you open a fucking movie! I have no idea how Fuller meant to achieve all of that in one shot, but it would’ve been incredible!
It’s this adherence and dedication to always providing the most real experience he could that always enthralls me and lifts his films above others from the period. It’s hard for me to go back to the traditional ’50s filmmaking styles after delving deep into Fuller’s uncompromising worlds. This isn’t to say that Fuller’s films were hyper-realistic tales stripped free of all fiction. In fact, many of his stories are very melodramatic and over the top, but each one of his films is laced with a reality that is undeniable. Especially in his war pictures, where small details give something he filmed in the ’50s more in common with a film from the ’90s. Fuller was always true to the world he experienced around him, dispelling bullshit whenever he could.
It’s a shame Tigrero never got made, but if it had I’m sure it would’ve sent his career into a different spiral and we might never have gotten the later films that we did. This is always an interesting principle to consider, the “what might have been if…” question that crops up often in humanity. We can only accept what has happened and move forward, much like Fuller did after the demise of Tigrero. This Tigrero isn’t a particularly great documentary, but for Fuller fans it is absolutely essential.
I couldn’t find a trailer, but here’s a part of the intro.