Gerry De Leon's Sanda Wong,
made in 1955, has been lost for years; only through the
efforts of film historian-archivist-distributor Teddy Co, has a print
been located in Hongkong, brought home to this country, and with the
help of Mowelfund and SOFIA (Society of Film Archivists), restored.
Sanda Wong
was a coproduction between Philippine and Hongkong filmmaking
outfits (and where are the international co-productions to be found today?)--a strictly commercial venture, out to make a profit. It was
conceived as shallow entertainment, and on its own purely mercenary
terms, it's a success. This isn't a literary production like Manuel
Silos' great Biyaya Ng Lupa (Blessings of the Land, 1959); it isn't even considered to
be among Gerry De Leon's best works.
What Sanda
Wong is, though--what's so surprising about it--is one of the most sheerly enjoyable Filipino films ever made. I
mean--bandits and magic rings! Secret dens, hidden treasures, pythons
that pop out of nowhere. This is in the great tradition of Gunga
Din, The Thief Of Baghdad, The Adventures Of
Robin Hood: gloriously irrelevant
confections, filled with contrivances just a step sideways from real
life, slightly larger than real life, and as entertaining as hell. I
actually enjoyed Sanda Wong more than Thief
Of Baghdad--heresy to the ears of a traditional film critic,
until you realize that the director, Michael Powell, was hamstrung by
a huge, problem-ridden production (input from other directors brought
in to fix the problems probably didn't help). Powell's filmmaking in Thief was square in a big-budgeted, Important Picture
way; De Leon was working with a larger than usual budget here, but by
Hollywood standards it's miniscule--he still had to improvise, and his
filmmaking is lean and hungry and evocatively imaginative.
But you don't
have to be some kind of film expert to appreciate Sanda Wong;
you don't have to exclaim "John Ford!" every time you see a figure framed dramatically against a brilliant white sky, or
"De Sade!" every time Wong (Jose Padilla,
Jr.) raised a whip against his beautiful Amazon beauty (Lilia Dizon,
mother of modern-day leading man Christopher De Leon). Sanda
Wong is gripping drama in its own right, a Jacobean struggle
between rich landowner Liu Chen (Danilo Montes) and the eponymous bandit king--two men who meet as mistrustful antagonists and part as
brothers in blood.
Wong believes
he's done Liu Chen a favor by rescuing him from the clutches of a
greedy general (Gil De Leon, husband of Ms. Dizon and father of Christopher) out to learn the location of Chen's treasure, but the man is more goading than grateful--the general had raped and driven to suicide Chen's freshly wedded wife (Lola Young), and he
wants Wong's help in exacting revenge. Like a troublesome conscience Chen reminds Wong of promises unfulfilled, of deeds
left undone, and suggests (without saying so directly) that Wong can be a better man than he thinks he is, that as is he's a
heavy-breathing braggart and something of a coward (not that Chen is
a paragon of virtue--played by Montes, he's a self-righteous prig
and hothead).
De Leon sketches
the blackly comic relationship between his two protagonists, two men
who couldn't be more different (and couldn't be more conscious of
that fact), yet are inextricably entwined; a pulpy romp like Raiders of the Lost
Ark, by way of comparison, is a mere cartoon, a fairly well-directed one;
you thrill to Jones' exploits, but never feel that Jones
has struggled with anything deeper than an archeological
dig, or suffered the loss of anything more significant than his floppy
hat.
There are
flaws--an outrageous one being the scene where Wong, in an
extravagant fit of cruelty, strips the Amazon down to her leopardskin
(Leopardskin! In China!) and forces her to dance a vaguely African
dance choreography. This is a cheesecake scene, of course, designed to show
off Ms. Dizon's superb figure (Dizon, incidentally, is sexier and
far more sensuous in leopardskin than most Filipina softcore porn stars are in their birthday suits nowadays--one hundred percent natural equipment mind you, no
plastic surgery involved).
But to point out
historical and cultural errors is to miss the point of B movies (so
called because they were (supposedly) a notch below the class-A
pictures); it's denying the wild and anything-goes spirit in which
these movies were made--and in fact, there is a psychological
rationale behind this scene: some shameful act is eating Wong
up inside, and he has to lash out at the nearest available scapegoat, in this case his favorite woman. Sadomasochism in a '50s Filipino-Hong Kong co-production? Absolutely.
I love the python, under the control of a magic ring; the python's scenes are
entirely believable (this plus the crocodile attack in Noli Me
Tangere suggests De Leon had a way with untamed creatures), with every appearance timed to cause the maximum number of
gasps. Compare this to the snake scene in the recent magic-realist Sa Pusod Ng Dagat (In the Navel of the Sea): that sorry
little reptile simply popped out of the woman's vagina--no attempt was
made to prepare you for this unlikely miracle, no attempt
made to do anything more with it. In effect the snake in Pusod was a
huge bore, the snake in Sanda
a small delight.
Sanda Wong
is a mix of skillful storytelling, superbly staged action, and
sumptuous production design--everything effortlessly balanced against
each other, lightly held in the palm of De Leon's
masterful hand. Not a great film, but definitely great entertainment.
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