Hikarix
Bontoc Eulogy

Bontoc Eulogy

The 1904 St. Louis World's Fair included a live exhibit of tribesmen from what is now known as the Philippines; what happened to these people?

01995

Marlon E. Fuentes' Bontoc Eulogy is a haunting, personal exploration into the filmmaker's complex relationship with his Filipino heritage as explored through the almost unbelievable story of the 1,100 Filipino tribal natives brought to the U.S. to be a "living exhibit" at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. For those who associate the famous fair with Judy Garland, clanging trolleys, and creampuff victoriana, Bontoc Eulogy offers a disturbing look at the cultural arrogance that went hand-in-hand with the Fair's glorification of progress. The Fair was the site of the world's largest ever "ethnological display rack," in which hundreds of so-called primitive and savage men and women from all over the globe were exhibited in contrast to the achievements of Western civilization.

The Displaced View
Conspiracy '58
The Key Issue
Land Without Bread
Dark Side of the Moon
The History of White People in America: Volume II
The Get Lost Losers
Jeffrey's Hell
Artur
A Glimpse Through The Bennington Lens
The Landlord
Farce of the Penguins
Le Gro Secret
Zombies in the Sugar Cane Field: The Documentary
The Baby Formula
Beneath Camp Ian
State of Bacon
Pandora Peaks
Capturar (Las 1001 novias)
The Stillness Syndrome