James Batman
Director Artemio Marquez Writers Pepito Vera-Perez, Artemio Marquez
Cast Dolphy (Batman/James), Boy Alano (Rubin), Shirley Moreno, Diane Balen
Greetings, Schlockateers - my name is Andrew Leavold from Trash Video welcoming you to the second in a four week season of International Superheroes here on Schlock Treatment, and a world-first: a Schlock Treatment exclusive subtitling of the Filipino James Bond-meets-Batman spoof, James Batman.
Tonight's film was already a rare example of
And yet , like other former colonial outposts
Dolphy began his career as a song and dance man and vaudeville comedian during the Japanese occupation during World War 2. The flourishing studio system in the early Fifties gave him a decade-long contact with Sampaguita Pictures, and he quickly graduated from bit roles and comic second banana parts to leading man in musical comedies. He encapsulated a droopy-shouldered and slightly pot bellied Pinoy Everyman: a henpecked, cowardly (if lovable) loser, or wily would-be trickster who both turn out "good" or at least functional to others in the end. Men identified with him, women adored him; before long he was making a movie a month, on top of TV and radio appearances. Parodies of Hollywood and European movies soon became Dolphy's forte, and he played the Pinoy version of everyone from the Lone Ranger to Tarzan, from - I kid you not! - Genghis Bond to Adolphong Hitler.
Tonight's movie James Batman was released in 1966, at the height of the Filipino komik superhero AND spy craze, featuring Dolphy as James Bond AND Batman - and often in the same scene! The "international" crime fighters are both called in to weed out nefarious organization CLAW and their leader, the cartoonishly Oriental Drago. Dolphy is hilarious as Bond, complete with lecherous sneer and a checkered jacket that matches the bedspreads (cool!), and it's a role he's familiar with, having already starred in a slew of spy knockoffs - Dolphinger, Dr Yes, Operation Butterball to name just three. But it's his Batman where the film comes alive and he steals the scenes from himself: crazed fight sequences, sadly with no Tagalog equivalents of "BIFF!" and "POW!", but with exaggerated tilts and low angles, and Carding Cruz's ever-present stolen surfadelic score. There's an array of other villains, not to mention an army of nurses with pre-war tommy guns, an all-girl squad with low cut black cocktail dresses and executioners' hoods, and the ending in Drago's lair - complete with a huge hand for a chair spitting lasers from the fingertips - kicks the entire Manila-A-Go-Go enterprise up one big lunatic notch. Superb.
Apologies for the grain-streaked picture and appalling sound, but it's a miracle the movie still exists, considering most of the
1 comment:
I just saw James Batman today! Enjoyed it! Didn't have a clue as to what was going on--but I loved it! I was exceptionally curious about what the verbal exchange was between James Bond and that Batgirl that popped up at the very end after she removed her mask. Did James have some disparaging comments about her less-than-glamorous face? And whatever became of Fu-Manchu??
Enjoyed it. Far better than Rat-Fink a Boo-Boo.
And thanks VERY much for all the history on the star Dolphy.
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