Screened as part of NZIFF 2020

The Kingmaker 2019

Directed by Lauren Greenfield Premieres

Lauren Greenfield (The Queen of Versailles, NZIFF12) harnesses extraordinary access and the boastful, unrepentant nature of her subject, Imelda Marcos, in this unsettling chronicle of ill-gotten wealth and political corruption.

USA In English and Tagalog with English subtitles
100 minutes VOD maximum viewer capacity applies – rent early to avoid disappointment

Screenplay

Lauren Greenfield

Producers

Frank Evers
,
Lauren Greenfield

Photography

Shana Hagan
,
Lars Skree

Editor

Per K. Kirkegaard

Music

Jocelyn Pook

With

Imelda Marcos
,
Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr
,
Leni Robredo
,
Noynoy Aquino III

Festivals

Venice, Telluride, Toronto, London, Warsaw, Amsterdam Documentary 2019

Awards

Audience Award, Warsaw International Film Festival 2019

Elsewhere

PRESENTED IN ASSOCIATION WITH

Magic Talk

We’ve all heard about the 1,220 pairs of shoes Imelda Marcos abandoned when she fled Manila in 1986, a symbol of the wealth she and her dictator husband, Ferdinand Marcos, embezzled while running the country’s economy and human rights into the ground. Now in her 80s, the former first lady of the Philippines is still as extravagant – and impenitent – as ever. Captured like never before, this eye-opening documentary paints a damning picture of Marcos’ ego in private, and her vanity in public as she flexes her political ambitions once more through son Bongbong, a vice presidential candidate, and other insidious networks of corruption.

As astute as it is ominous, The Kingmaker examines a staggering sense of denial and self-importance that resonates today for obvious reasons, but even more potently, a history of violence that threatens to resurface. Interviews with Marcos’ allies and enemies, and reflections on the suffering of communities during martial law, reveal the horrors behind the legacy. So confident of her importance to the Philippines, Marcos believes she’s starring in a hagiography, but what director Lauren Greenfield gets on camera is much closer to The Act of Killing. — Tim Wong

“‘Perception is real, and the truth is not,’ says Marcos. She is a master of denial and image manipulation to such a degree that it feels like she believes her lies… Perhaps the most disturbing thing about The Kingmaker is that Marcos’ attempts to rewrite history seem to be working in some ways. And one could argue that image control led the country to where it is now under the [Rodrigo] Duterte regime. The story of the Marcos legacy isn’t over, but The Kingmaker is a major chapter in it, and world politics as a whole.” — Brian Tallerico, RogerEbert.com

About the Filmmaker
Lauren Greenfield is an Emmy Award-winning filmmaker and photographer whose work spans consumerism, youth culture and gender. Selected filmography: Generation Wealth (2018), The Queen of Versailles (2012), Thin (2006).