Documentary looks at political comeback of Imelda Marcos
VENICE, Italy — Documentary filmmaker Lauren Greenfield started interviewing former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos four years ago thinking that it might be a redemption story for the then 85-year-old. What she found is that Marcos was not only standing by the controversial history of her family but defending it as well.
Greenfield’s documentary about Marcos, “The Kingmaker,” premiered Friday at the Venice International Film Festival.
Imelda Marcos’s husband, the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos presided over the country for 20 years and declared martial law in 1972, which ultimately resulted in his being ousted by an army-backed “people power” revolt in 1986. He died in self-exile in Hawaii in 1989 but Imelda Marcos and her children returned to the Philippines where many have been elected to political office.
“I started it attracted to Imelda Marcos because she was an iconic reference in the work I was doing on wealth,” Greenfield said Friday in a press conference. She’d heard about extravagances — her 3,000 pairs of shoes and the island she turned into a wildlife sanctuary for exotic animals — but came to understand that there was another story brewing beyond the decadence.