Bomba was a Filipino film genre, characterized by its gratuitous use of sex scenes.[1] It was most popular in the late 1960s, and was a focal point of cultural debates around sex and sexuality.
History
editBomba emerged as a genre of film in the Philippines in the late 1960s. Bomba films featured nudity, albeit not full-frontal nudity, as well as simulated sex scenes that were often tangential to the plot. Films in the genre include a mix of soft-core and hard-core pornography, with new bomba films becoming more sexually explicit over time.[2] Despite their sexual content, bomba films were a mainstream phenomenon in the Philippines, and actresses associated with the genre, referred to as "bomba stars", appeared frequently in mainstream media.[1]
Analysis
editBomba played a role in revitalizing Filipino film at the end of the 1960s as one of the few local film genres that could draw audiences away from imported American films. Beyond the commercial success of the films themselves, the provocative nature of the films' sexual content became a subject of extensive cultural debate.[1] Bomba films remain one of the only categories of 1960s Filipino film to have drawn extensive critical attention.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Hawkins, Michael G. (2010). "Our Men in Manila The Secret Agent Film Craze of the 1960s in the Philippine Postcolonial Imagination". Philippine Studies. 58 (3): 349–381. ISSN 0031-7837. JSTOR 42634639.
- ^ "When 'bomba' sex films were a staple of Philippine cinemas and their female stars graced magazine covers". South China Morning Post. 17 February 2019. Archived from the original on 11 May 2019. Retrieved 18 June 2022.
- ^ Atienza, John Adrianfer (2021). "Locating the 1960s Filipino Western Genre". Southeast Asian Media Studies Journal. 3 (3) – via ResearchGate.