Selina-s Gold - -2022-

Chains of Gold: Patriarchy, Resistance, and the Illusion of Liberation in Selina’s Gold (2022)

In the landscape of contemporary Philippine cinema, particularly within the mainstream independent film circuit (often referred to as “mainstream indie” or “sexy-drama”), Selina’s Gold (2022) stands out not merely for its explicit content but for its deliberate narrative architecture. The film’s premise is deceptively simple: a young woman, Selina (Cindy Miranda), is effectively sold by her impoverished family to a wealthy, abusive old man, Tasio (Ricky Davao). However, the film quickly evolves from a tale of victimhood into a complex revenge drama.

The transaction between Selina’s mother and Tasio is not presented as an aberration but as a logical, if horrifying, extension of the village’s economic logic. In this context, a daughter’s body is the family’s only appreciating asset. This mirrors real-world issues in rural Philippines and other developing nations where “mail-order bride” dynamics and transactional marriages persist. The film’s critique is pointed: patriarchy does not operate alone; it is enabled by capitalism. Tasio’s power is not just physical or gendered; it is economic. He owns the land, the gold, and, by extension, the people. Selina’s initial lack of agency is therefore not a character flaw but a systemic condition. Selina-s Gold -2022-

It is impossible to ignore that Selina’s Gold was marketed with an emphasis on its erotic content. However, the film deliberately weaponizes these expectations. The sex scenes are not titillating; they are uncomfortable, performative, and often violent. The film denies the viewer the traditional pleasure of the erotic thriller. This is a deliberate Brechtian strategy—making the audience aware of their own voyeurism. By watching Selina’s abuse, the audience is implicated in the same system of consumption that Tasio represents. The film asks: Are you watching for the plot, or are you watching to see a woman’s body? By frustrating the latter expectation, the film delivers a meta-critique of its own genre.

The film’s ultimate conclusion is deeply pessimistic: There is no liberation inside the master’s house, even if you burn it down. Selina survives, but survival is not living. She acquires the gold, but the gold acquires her. In the final frame, as Selina looks out at the village she came from, she is no longer one of them. She has become the new lord of the manor, trapped not by a husband, but by the very structure of wealth and violence she has inherited. Chains of Gold: Patriarchy, Resistance, and the Illusion

The film diverges from Western revenge narratives like Promising Young Woman or Revenge . In those films, the protagonist often achieves catharsis or transcendence. Selina achieves neither. She wins the property, but the film suggests she has lost her soul. The “gold” she fought for is merely the currency of the system that enslaved her.

Selina’s Gold (2022), directed by Mac Alejandre, operates on multiple levels: as a melodrama, a social critique, and a psychological thriller. Set against the backdrop of rural Filipino poverty, the film follows Selina, a young woman sold into a transactional marriage with the elderly and cruel Tasio. This paper argues that the film functions as a scathing deconstruction of the “golden opportunity” narrative often imposed on impoverished women. While the title suggests value and prosperity (gold), the narrative systematically reveals that this gold is, in fact, a cage. Through an analysis of character dynamics, visual metaphors, and the subversion of the erotic thriller genre, this paper explores how Selina’s Gold critiques systemic patriarchy, the commodification of female bodies, and the false binary of victimhood and agency. Ultimately, the film posits that survival in a patriarchal system does not equate to liberation; rather, it reveals the psychological cost of resistance enacted through the very tools of oppression. The transaction between Selina’s mother and Tasio is

The paper concludes that Selina’s Gold is essential viewing not as pornography or as pure entertainment, but as a feminist text that acknowledges the tragic compromises required of women in a world that values their bodies more than their souls. The gold, in the end, is fool’s gold—and Selina is its final, glittering victim.