Zamboanga
Zamboanga
Available in stock
In the 1930s, circus showmen George Harris and Eddie Tait decided to get into the movie business. Setting up shop in the Philippines, they used their considerable capital to found the country's first studio, Filippine Films. Tait and Harris's plan was to export pictures made for American audiences, with dreams of giving Hollywood a run for their money as production capital of the world. Directed by Eduardo de Castro on the volcanic island of Jolo, their hoped-for-epic Zamboanga featured amazing underwater cinematography by cameraman William H. Jansen. After nine months of filming, the negative was taken to Hollywood for editing and scoring, while narration was provided by Dr. C Frederick Lindsley, Professor of Speech at Occidental College in Los Angeles and host of the cop radio show Calling All Cars (1933-1939). Despite rave reviews from both The Hollywood Reporter and The Los Angeles Times, Zamboanga would only screen before audiences in San Francisco and New York. Tait and Harris had run out of money, having not accounted for the high taxes the production would incur. Despite this, they inadvertently led to the establishment of the Filipino movie industry, and the success of studios like LVN, Premiere, and Sampaguita. Zamboanga took on such a legendary status in the Philippines that Fernando Poe, Jr., the son of its leading man, remade the film in 1966 (His father, Fernando Poe, Sr., died fifteen years earlier after being bitten by a rabid dog.)
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