1969 – Dugo Ng
Vampira/“Blood Of The Vampire” (VP Pictures/Sampaguita Pictures)
[Release date 12th
June 1969]
Director/Screenplay
Emmanuel H. Borlaza Story Rico Bello Omagap based on his Lagim Komiks
serial Executive Producer/VP Pictures President “J.R.P”
Cinematography Felipe S. Santiago Music Danny Holmsen Editor
Marcelino Navarro Assistant Director Warlito M. Teodoro Camera
Assistants Ernesto de la Paz, Mariano Manuel Special Photographic
Effects Ricardo “Mang Andoy” Marcelino, Pete Carreon Sound
Supervision Flaviano Villareal Rerecording Alfonso Nuke Rerecoding
Assistants Tomas Olfindo, Tony Caymo Jr Recording Rosalino Torres
Recording Assistants Amado Valdez, Pablo Paulino Assistant Editor
Jessie Navarro Laboratory Technician Vicente J. Aquende Laboratory
Assistant Rufino Rosales Printer Bobby Braga Printer Assistant Angel
Braga Set Supervisor Bert Sto. Domingo Makeup/Hair Conching Morato
Costume Supervisor Marichu E. Nina Titles Greg Alcid Jr Technical
Assistant Ernesto M. Maceda
Cast Gina Pareno
(Lucinda/Rosario), Edgar Salcedo (Victor), Myrna Delgado (Lucinda &
Rosario’s Mother), Tito Galla (Rufo), Charlie Davao (Angustia the
Vampire), Venchito Galvez, Ven Medina, Tita de Villa, Nenita Jana,
Aring Bautista, Linda Martin, Glenn Bernardo, Gina Alajar (Young
Lucinda), Bella Flores (Vampire Bride), German Moreno (Gay Tourist),
Apolonio Abadeza, Jessette Prospero, Byron Cruz, Sammy Fresado,
Nestor Arsenal, Leo Ferrer
Review by Andrew
Leavold
Horror has long been
a staple of Filipino genre cinema, even in its earliest features
prior to World War 2. Later horror films such as Gerry de Leon’s
Kamay Ni Satanas (1950) and the Faustian tale Satur (dir. Lamberto V.
Avellana, 1952) betray a ferocious Catholicism, while Ramadal (dir.
Nemesio E. Caravana, 1958) - “BEWARE! An Invisible Man is on the
loose in Manila!” - is a gleeful appropriation of imported
Hollywood conventions. Vampire cinema in particular lends itself to
the Filipino sensibility, planting itself comfortably on top of the
Philippines’ rich legacy of folklore and superstition: malevolent
shapeshifting Aswang, the bloodsucking Manananggal whose bodies split
in two at the torso, even the tree-dwelling Tikbalang, centaurs with
the head and legs of an enormous horse. It’s strange, then, that
most Pinoy vampire films from the Sixties should be of the nudge-wink
variety, either in horror vehicles leavened with comedy to make them
more palatable (“4 spine-chilling, rib-tickling comedy-horror
thrillers!” screams the poster for the anthology film Kababalaghan
O Kabulastugan), or as foils for popular comedians Dolphy, Chiquito
and Pugo.
As with much of the
Philippines’ pre-Eighties cinema, very few vampire films from the
period have survived. Thankfully there are two bona-fide masterpieces
of Pinoy horror by Gerry de Leon…and then there’s Dugo Ng Vampira
from 1969. Naturally it’s unfair to sit Dugo… next to the
exponentially and, by their very pedigree, superior de Leon films The
Blood Drinkers (1964) and Curse Of The Vampires (1966), but
comparisons are inevitable. For years Dugo Ng Vampira (translated:
Blood Of The Vampire) was believed to be the Tagalog title of Curse
Of The Vampires (also released in the US as Blood…), and only
recently surfaced after Sampaguita transferred their remaining film
library onto VHS through retailer Kabayan Central.
Dugo Ng Vampira is
very much a product of a studio system in decline, and it shows; Vera
Perez Pictures was an offshoot of Sampaguita Films which until the
early Sixties was part of the Big Three’s monopoly over Filipino
cinema, along with LVN Pictures, and Premiere Productions, owned by
Cirio H. Santiago’s family. Both The Blood Drinkers and Curse Of
The Vampires were constructed from the ground up as export-friendly
titles, filmed in technicolour and dubbed into English using the
actors’ own voices. Dugo…, on the other hand, is a prime example
of the local industry’s glaring limitations: patchy live sound, an
unwieldy regulation 110-minute running time, a masala of melodrama
and comedy based on a pre-branded komik series, and a dreadful
transfer from a scratched, rat-assed black and white 35mm print. That
the film still exists, however, is a miracle in itself; the fact it’s
a decent populist Pinoy horror from the Sixties is, for the most
part, pure cream.
Dugo Ng Vampira’s
hand-scribed credits flash over an opening that’s vintage Universal
horror: the town’s landed gentleman and unrepentant vampire
Angustia (Charlie Davao) has just feasted on a young female victim
(Bella Flores) and is now pursued by an angry mob of torch-carrying
villagers. Cornered in the grounds of his villa, Angustia is staked
through the heart with a sharpened cross and left to die alone in
agony. With the sound of a howling wolf in the distance, he is tended
to by his distraught sweetheart (Myrna Delgado), who removes the
cross and buries him underneath it. Being mortal, she is also
carrying the vampire’s children – twins, one good and one
inherently evil – and after her mother is thrown down her stairs by
an unseen force (linked to the cobra curled around the vampire’s
grave marker!), she leaves one of the babies, flees the village with
the other child, and heads in a trance directly for the sanctuary of
Angustia’s villa.
|
Hasta La Vampira! |
A decade passes, and
the mother grows suspicious of her remaining child’s true nature.
She catches the girl Lucinda (Gina Alajar) in a cave talking to a
cobra and bat – and the bat, a bizarre sock puppet contraption with
wings, is talking back! The girl plumps up quickly into a brazen
teenaged hussy (Gina Pareno), unaware of the existence of her twin
sister Rosario (also Pareno, without the excessively vampish makeup,
puffy hair and go-go boots). Meanwhile the mouldered corpse of their
father rises out of the soil, transforms into his suave former self,
then disappears in a flapping of bat wings and reappears at the villa
along with his last victim, unlocked from her cobra shell. Angustia
and his new bride are keen to teach Lucinda the finer points of her
vampiric legacy (“We need blood,” they hiss, “HUMAN blood…”),
and take her for a flying visit around the craggy countryside looking
for victims. It’s here the film’s rudimentary special effects –
dissolves, jump cuts, miniatures for the Villa exterior – take a
quantum leap: Lucinda complains of being tired, and suddenly the
cabal split into two mid-air in typical Manananggal fashion, their
fanged top halves continuing to soar while the bodies gently land. A
simple optical effect, and positively prehistoric by today’s
standards, but crudely and eerily effective.
|
Lucinda takes a flying split |
Naturally the
plaited, seminary-going Rosario is mistaken for her bloodsucking
sister, and her beloved Victor (Edgar Salcedo) becomes fiercely
protective of her; once the angry villagers notice she is not scared
of a crucifix but the “other” Rosario is, the hunt is on for a
neighbourhood vampire. (Theirs’ is only a small provincial village,
so how could they miss a mother and child camped in their most
notorious resident’s former hacienda? And here’s another plot
hole so large you could part a hearse in it: why didn’t Angustia
turn to ash at the film’s beginning? Now back to the movie proper…)
Victor’s deceitful, treacherous lothario brother Rufo (Tito Galla)
arrives from the city and he too has eyes for Rosario; Rufo’s plan
is to trap her in his house until she falls in love with him, but
then the equally duplicitous Lucinda, posing as Rosario, seduces him
over to the Other Side. The scenario now brother against brother,
mother against child, as both families fight to save what Goodness is
left within them.
|
The Last Temptation of Rufo |
More pronounced than
ever is the presence of Evil – in this instance, vampirism - as a
dramatic rip in the fabric of everyday, God-fearing, family-bound
normalcy. The film’s core rests upon a triumvirate of dualistic
relationships, one representing Good, or at the very least
temporarily lost and potentially salvageable, and the other Evil:
unwed mother and vampire Angustia, daughters Rosaria (Rosary,
perhaps?) and Lucinda (Lucifer?) and brothers-at-war Victor and Rufo.
The protracted finale sees not only Victor cornered and forced to
kill his sibling (in a neat twist, with a conch shell!), but the
mother to sacrifice her Bad Seed – by this moment, Angustia has
already impaled his jealous vampire bride on the iron rod sticking
out of his chest. “Why didn’t you call God?” demands the
mother, as Lucinda writhes under the shadow of a makeshift cross.
“Hope you rest in peace,” she says quietly, as Lucinda turns to
ashes and is blown away by the wind. In Dugo’s intensely moral,
necessarily komik page black-and-white universe, Evil is ultimately
vanquished and the wayward are brought back to God’s bosom, but at
a heavy price.
|
Vampire death by conch shell. A first? |
At times you’d be
forgiven for thinking Dugo… is a Bollywood remake of a Mexican
vampire film: melodramatic, a fusion of Asian and Hispanic
family-centricity, tarnished and years-weary, and entertaining in an
arched, eccentric way. In its favour it’s not nearly as cloying and
sentimental as it could be, there are no musical numbers to spoil the
atmosphere, and the regulation comic relief from a mugging German
Moreno – effeminate leader of a group of tourists stranded
overnight at Angustia’s villa - is kept to a minimum, as is the
teen soap angle (if Vilma Santos or Nora Aunor were the lead, God
help us...). OK, so comparisons are mean, and so what if Dugo Ng
Vampira is no Curse Of The Vampires? Sometimes it’s good to turn a
blind eye to the Ugly Duckling’s smarter and prettier classmates
and welcome them home as a lost child, sorely missed and never to be
forgotten.
2 comments:
When i can watch this film Dugo ng Bampira in YouTube ????
Sana may restoration nung film neto. Naabutan ko to nirereplay dati sa RPN ata un tuwing noon time.
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