Friday, October 3, 2025

Rocco, Ang Batang Bato (1982)


1982 – Rocco, Ang Batang Bato/"Rocco, The Stone Boy" (D’Wonder Films Inc)

[Release date 23rd June 1982; also released internationally by Cinex Films Inc as “Boy God” and "Stone Boy", in Spain as "SuperNino de Piedra y los Titanes del Universo", and in Argentina as "El Niño Espacial"]

Director J. Erastheo Navoa Story/Screenplay Joeben Miraflor Based on his DZXL radio serial [ads credit Screenplay to Eliseo Corcuerra] Executive Producer Alexander Muhlach Music Ernani Cuenco [ads credit Mar Lopez] Cinematography Hermo Santos Editor Joe Mendoza [ads credit Eduardo Jarlego] Sound Effects Danny Sanchez Sound Supervision Rudy Baldovino Assistant Editor Edgar Gutierrez Foreign Adaptation Jess Ramos

Cast [listed in the export version's credits] Niño Muhlach (Rocco), Jimi Melendez [as “Jim Melendrez”] (Dr Aldy), Isabel Rivas (Nelly), Cecille Castillo (Cora), [credited on Filipino ads only] Liz Alindogan (Janus), Dely Atay-Atayan (Donata, Rocco's Granny), Johnny Wilson (Dr Mengele), Rodolfo "Boy" Garcia (Robbie), Ulysses Tzan (Isabelo), Ferdie Marcelo, Lucita Soriano (Katrina Gallego de Monte Carlo), Tatlong Pinoy (Scared Villagers), Edlyn Peregrina (Nelly's Sister), [uncredited] Palito (Pancho), Don Pepot (Captain Hugo)

HORROR/FANTASY/FAMILY/ACTION/COMEDY

Cinex Films' international poster

NOTES by Andrew Leavold: One of two Nino Muhlach films, along with Hepe/The Crazy Bunch (1980) purchased by Cinex Films Inc for international release from Nino's father, Alexander Muhlach's D'Wonder Films.






Review by Andrew Leavold

Boy God, or Stone Boy as it's also known, stars possibly the most famous Filipino child star of all time, Nino Muhlach. Success for young Nino was in his genes, as the Muchlach clan was tantamount to film royalty - Auntie Amalia Fuentes (The Blood Drinkers [1964] and Curse Of The Vampires [1966]) will be forever remembered as the "Elizabeth Taylor of the Philippines". From age three, Nino would receive top-billing with the most famous film stars of the Seventies, and sentimental audiences warmed to his moon face and chubby thighs immediately, so that one of his 1977 films would out-gross the original Star Wars. Nino's father Alexander Muhlach formed D'Wonder Films to capitalize on Nino's early success, thus becoming one of the most powerful independent producers of the day.

By 1982 he was approaching his teen years and was now not quite so cute and adorable, and his box office lustre had begun to lose the tiniest degree of its shine. D'Wonder had previously bought into the iconic Darna franchise with Darna At Ding (1980), featuring Vilma Santos as the Philippines' answer to both Supergirl and Wonder Woman and cherubic Nino as her little brother, and with its already-established Darna fanbase and cheap yet charming and effective special effects, the film broke box office records as the most successful Darna ever over Christmas 1980. The ever-resourceful Muhlach Clan wisely decided to return to the fantasy genre one more time with 1982's Boy God.


Baby Rocco is born the same night his parents are gunned down outside their house. Years later, Rocco is now a precocious eleven-year old living with his grandmother (veteran matriach figure Dely Ayaty-Atayan), who warns him to keep his growing powers secret. “You’re like limestone,” she explains - harder under heat, but dissolves in water. Just what a self-conscious eleven year-old wants to hear. Meanwhile the evil German scientist Dr Mengele (Johnny Wilson) is turning the village into werewolves and vampires, and the pale bodies of their victims are starting to pile up by the waterfront. Little Rocco is captured by three witches who keep him weak and moist and, in the film's most disturbing image of all, they tie a naked, basted Nino to a bamboo spit under a full moon (not Rocco’s, of course) while turning into werewolves. The heat naturally makes him stronger and he escapes, only to be picked up in a fantastic tracking shot by a swooping, screeching vampire bat (a costume with enormous bat ears and umbrellas for arms).


Recovering in a cave, Rocco sees a vision of Vulcan, an Elder of the Immortals. The blind coot tells Rocco of his Immortal heritage - his father, Python, fell in love with a mortal, making him half-god - and suggests he travel to the Land of the Small People to save his parents from Limbo. At this moment the film morphs once again from vampires and werewolves and becomes Clash Of The Titans, or a much cheaper Italian variety sword and sandal adventure. He wakes next to a gladiator costume ("looks like a fat girl's dress!") and sets off towards his mist-shrouded goal, battling a small array of mythical creatures, but aided by an army of dwarves - all no taller than Rocco - and the girl warrior “Janus” (Liz Alindogan), who looks and sounds suspiciously like Darna. Cue the trick perspective shots and claymation that would make Ray Harryhausen blanch, and perhaps the definitive shot of the film, in which the giant cyclops Golem plucks up one of the dwarves, chomps through his middle (this is a kid’s film?) and spits out his sword like a toothpick.




It's a strange film alright, cute and baffling, though with a simple three-act structure - boy learns powers, boy battles monsters, boy becomes immortal - which never allows the film to grow stale. Filipino films are renowned for "borrowing" elements from other films, and it's not just Clash Of The Titans from which the film takes its cues; there's the dwarf army from Time Bandits, and a lycanthrope transformation scene cribbed from either An American Werewolf In London or The Howling which, despite its crude stop-motion effects with plasticine and Brillo pads, is unnerving enough both in its primitivism, and in its family film context. There are also echoes of the Philippines' own bloodthirsty folklore in Boy God's creatures: shape-shifting female blood drinkers, the Aswang, and the bat-winged eaters of the dead, the Manananggal (unlike Boy God's batmen, however, their torsos detach themselves for easier flying), which have been unnerving Filipino children, not to mention adults, for centuries. It's this black wedding of Hollywood fantasy and horror and the Philippines' own brand of ghoulishness which gives Boy God its potency - a Harryhausen epic on a hundredth its budget, of course, but with monsters the folk in the Provinces will tell you are very, VERY real. Now that's unnerving.


Todd Stadtman's review from his Die, Danger, Die, Die, Kill! blog

Review on the Films From The Far Reaches blog: "Here's a truly bizarre children's fantasy from the Phillipines that somehow manages to be equal measures charming and creepy (O.K. mostly creepy) while containing enough freaky imagery to send many an unsuspecting Western viewer's head spinning in disbelief."


Tars Tarkas' review on TarsTarkasNet:
"What a great movie for children! In the opening minute there is a woman being molested in her sleep by a spectral god, having an orgasm because, why not? Then her parents are gunned down less than two minutes later by a ruthless local warlord. An annoying fat kid then bloats up the running time until we finally get the werewolves, vampires, and monsters. Kids love violence and rape and annoying fat kids, and Boy God aka Stone Boy aka Rocco, Ang Batang Bato gives the children what they want!"

Reviews on Letterboxd








Niño Muhlach (Rocco)


Jimi Melendez (Dr Aldy)


Isabel Rivas (Nelly) and Edlyn Peregrina (Nelly's Sister)


Cecille Castillo (Cora)


Liz Alindogan (Janus)


Dely Atay-Atayan (Donata, Rocco's Granny)


Johnny Wilson (Dr Mengele)


Rodolfo "Boy" Garcia (Robbie)


Ulysses Tzan (Isabelo)


Lucita Soriano (Katrina Gallego de Monte Carlo)


Tatlong Pinoy (Scared Villagers)


Palito (Pancho)


Don Pepot (Captain Hugo)

...and some unidentified actors (please let me know if they look familiar!)






































THEATRICAL

Image courtesy of Video 48

PHILIPPINES - released to local theatres as "Rocco, Ang Batang Bato" 


MEXICO - dubbed into Spanish and released as "SuperNino de Piedra y los Titanes del Universo"

VIDEO


USA - released as "The Boy God" [on-screen title "Boy God"] via Video City Productions


AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND - released as "Stone Boy" via VM


ARGENTINA - Spanish-dubbed VHS release as "El Niño Espacial" via Gourmet Video Company




- Australian VHS

- Mexican theatrical half-sheet poster 

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