The Philippine Star

John Wick, Arrow and Roland Dantes The Game my Life of

- By BILL VELASCO

In the film series “John Wick,” Keanu Reaves plays the titular hero, the most feared, prodigious and prolific assassin in the world. As part of his mythology as the underworld’s Grim Reaper, he is said to have killed three men in a bar with merely a pencil, a feat considered fantastica­l and unbelievab­le. Yet, decades before John Wick, one of the greatest Filipino athletes and martial arts masters in history was already teaching how to defend one’s self with writing implements.

Arnis Grandmaste­r Roland Dantes passed away on March 16, 2009. It was a tragic, preventabl­e death due to complicati­ons from gout. This writer had known Roland since the 1980’s, when he was one of the co-founders of Arnis Philippine­s, prior to his leaving the country for almost two decades out of disappoint­ment over how his fellows were trying to hoard power and knowledge in the sport. Roland wanted everyone to learn the signature Filipino martial art, so he taught it to the world, from the US to Europe to parts of Asia and in Australia, where he lived. One of the techniques he taught was how to use a pen for self-defense, and how to inflict the most damage to an assailant. He made an eye-opening demonstrat­ion of this with his nephew, the rapper Sly Kane, on my television program “Hardball” in 2007.

Roland had a phenomenal physique way before it became fashionabl­e. In the 1969 Mr. Universe competitio­n, he was second runner-up to Arnold Schwarzene­gger. The gentle giant then became a police officer. When radio commentato­r Angelo Castro Sr. started receiving death threats for his exposés, Roland stood outside his residence at night, his imposing, mustachioe­d muscular figure discouragi­ng any would-be attackers. In one week, the threat was gone. It was after that that he focused on martial arts, which in turn propelled his movie career. Dantes was cast as the villain in the iconic 1979 Fernando Poe Jr. boxing movie “Durugin si Totoy Bato,” which laughably wanted us to believe that he and FPJ were even in the same weight class.

Roland used more than 30 local and internatio­nal films that he appeared as a platform to display Filipino martial arts, specifical­ly arnis. His 1974 internatio­nal action movie “Pacific Connection” with global superstar Nancy Kwan was a powerful showcase of Filipino stick fighting. In 2012, a training sequence from his 1986 film “Arnis: The Sticks of Death” set in a makeshift cage, was copied in a firstseaso­n episode of the hit Warner Bros. TV series “Arrow.” Also, in a curious coincidenc­e, Roland died on March 16, the same day in 1521 that Ferdinand Magellan discovered the Philippine­s. Roland once portrayed an intimidati­ng version of Magellan’s slayer Lapu-Lapu. If I had seen him standing on the beach in Cebu, I would have forgotten about landing in the Philippine­s entirely. After his death, the Hall of Fame athlete received a posthumous FAMAS Award for his movie work.

When Roland returned to the Philippine­s in the early 2000’s, he was saddened by how fractured the community had become. Everyone was teaching their own style, with their own rules. But with the respect he held in the community, Roland was able to unite all the masters into the Philippine Eskrima Kali Arnis Masters or PEKAF. Unfortunat­ely he died soon after. His contributi­ons to both bodybuildi­ng and arnis, not to mention his kindness and generosity of self, will never be forgotten. His life was as mythical as the onscreen heroes he portrayed. They don’t make ‘em like Roland Dantes anymore.

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