STORYSMART® Film Receives Major Grant Support from St. Louis Film Project

Ron Watermon • April 24, 2025

Documentary to Premiere Spring 2026

We are honored to share some big news.  Our documentary, A Steak Guerrilla in St. Louis: The Dr. Arturo Taca Story, has been selected as one of five projects to receive funding from the St. Louis Film Project, a collaboration between the Regional Arts Commission (RAC) of St. Louis and Continuity.

This recognition comes from a highly competitive pool of 115 applicants. The grant—up to $100,000—represents a decisive vote of confidence in our story and our approach to telling it. It also offers meaningful momentum as we enter the next phase of production.

Most importantly, it reinforces what we believe: Dr. Arturo Taca’s story matters and deserves to be told.


A Story Rooted in St. Louis — and Felt Across the World

“A Steak Guerrilla in St. Louis” is a documentary rooted in the unlikely convergence of midwestern Americana and Filipino resistance. It follows the story of Dr. Arturo M. Taca, a Filipino surgeon and political exile who made St. Louis his home while taking a stand against Ferdinand Marcos's brutal dictatorship.

Before terms like “fake news” and “disinformation” became common in American discourse, Dr. Taca uncovered the truth behind the Philippine president's fraudulent war record. That investigation began here—in dusty archives just outside of St. Louis—and set off a chain of events that toppled a brutal dictator.

Our film uses a hybrid storytelling format, combining animated reenactments, interviews, and archival research to tell this story in an emotionally resonant and visually striking way. 


The Grant That Helps Make It Possible

The St. Louis Film Project grant, funded through RAC and administered by Continuity, is part of an initiative to uplift the film community in St. Louis. RAC’s press release states that the fund was created to “support local filmmakers and organizations to tell stories rooted in St. Louis.”

The evaluation process was rigorous. 

“Choosing five projects from over 100 submissions was no easy feat," said Vanessa Cooksey, President of RAC. "The talent and stories presented were incredible.”

That’s why being one of the five chosen is more than just a financial boost—it affirms this story’s value and connection to our community. It means much to us, and we don’t take it lightly.


A Delayed Start But a Firm Deadline

While the grant announcement arrived months later than initially expected, we’ve been working behind the scenes to be ready to go once we receive funding.  With this grant officially in place, we’re full steam ahead.   

The grant contractually obligates us to deliver the completed film by January 2026. That’s a fast turnaround in documentary filmmaking, especially for a story with historical depth, international relevance, and a visual style that blends live action with animation.

That means every day counts. While the grant covers significant production costs, it also comes with essential parameters: 75% of funds must be spent within the City of St. Louis.   

We’re proud of that requirement—it aligns with our belief in investing locally and elevating regional talent. But it also means we must be innovative, strategic, and resourceful with every dollar we spend.   

We have our entire team in place, minus one critical position. We need a gifted DP to join our elite team. We are eager to work with a tremendous city-based production company or cinematographer who calls St. Louis home.  If you know a great cinematographer who would like to join us, please have them email me at ron@storysmart.net.  


Why We’re Still Seeking Donor Support

Even with the RAC grant, bringing this film to life in the way it deserves will take more. Animation, archival licensing, original score composition, color grading, distribution planning—it all adds up. And some of this can't be sourced in a way that fits grant guidelines.  And because of the ambitious deadline, we’ll need to scale quickly without cutting corners.  That’s where you come in.

We’re seeking additional donor support to help us:
  • Expand our animation sequences and visual storytelling capacity.
  • Secure the rights to key archival materials that deepen the film’s historical accuracy.
  • Shoot at least a couple of interviews with key individuals who live outside our region, including the Philippines.
  • Invest in editorial and post-production tools that allow us to move efficiently without sacrificing quality.
  • Ensure the finished film reaches the broadest possible audience, from film festivals to classrooms to international broadcast platforms.
Your contribution—no matter the size—helps ensure that Dr. Taca’s story is told with the care, accuracy, and cinematic impact it deserves. If you believe in the power of truth-telling… if you value stories that connect communities and illuminate buried history… we hope you’ll consider becoming a supporter.




A Final Word: Why This Story Matters Now

We often think history is distant, locked away in textbooks or museums. But A Steak Guerrilla in St. Louis reminds us that history is constantly being rediscovered—sometimes in our backyard.

It’s a reminder that exile doesn’t silence the truth, that one person in one city can stand up to a dictator and change the course of a narrative written in lies, and that the work of defending democracy happens quietly, persistently, and often without recognition.

Now, it’s time to give that recognition.

With this grant—and with your support—we’re going to finish the film. And when we do, we’ll bring a hidden chapter of St. Louis history that reverberates far beyond our city limits.

Thank you for sharing this journey with us, and a special thanks to each member of our talented filmmaking team.   I'm grateful for your willingness to work to bring this story to the screen, your patience through this process, and your unselfish (uncompensated) work to make it happen. I have no doubt it will all be worth it!  

--Ron Watermon, Executive Producer & Director, A Steak Guerrilla in St. Louis: The Dr. Arturo M. Taca Story


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