Showing posts with label Uruphong Raksasad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uruphong Raksasad. Show all posts
Thursday, June 23, 2016
Extra Virgin unlocks indies with Distance, Rice Trilogy and Island Funeral
Extra Virgin, the indie production and distribution shingle run by producer-director Pimpaka Towira, has a new initiative with SF cinemas in Thailand, Unlock Indies, a film series that opened last week with the multi-country co-production Distance.
Others in the series will be The Rice Trilogy by Uruphong Raksasad and Pimpaka's own latest feature, The Island Funeral
.
The films are being released in a very limited run. Don't blink, or you will miss them. For example, Distance was initially released at SF World Cinema at CentralWorld and SFX Cinema Central Rama 9 in Bangkok, and at SFX Maya Chiang Mai. Today, it's down to just one screening a day at CentralWorld.
Next week, the program changes to what's now known as Uruphong's Rice Trilogy, with Stories from the North, Agrarian Utopia and The Songs of Rice (เพลงของข้าว, Pleng Khong Kao) taking turns on the big screen. They are among my favorites, and I hope he makes more films like these.
And on July 21, Pimpaka will release her own film, The Island Funeral (มหาสมุทรและสุสาน, Maha Samut Lae Susaan), which premiered last year in Tokyo and has been on a tear around the world, screening in places like Seattle, Aichi and Valetta and winning awards in Tokyo and Hong Kong. The Island Funeral will also be shown at the Singapore Festival of the Arts.
Meanwhile, Distance is an ambitious project headed up by Singaporean director Anthony Chen, winner of the Camera d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival for his 2013 debut drama Ilo Ilo. He gets help from Thai producer Aditya Assarat, who also wrote one of the segments.
With Distance, Chen and Assarat pay tribute to their Taiwanese and Chinese cinema influences and rounded up three young-buck award-winning Asian directors to do the job. They are Tan Shijie from Singapore, Xin Yukun from China and Sivaroj Kongsakul from Thailand. Each take a crack at directing Taiwanese actor Chen Bo-lin in segments that explore the notion of "distance" and what it means in our societies.
Labels:
Aditya Assarat,
Bangkok,
festivals,
indie,
Pan-Asian,
Pimpaka Towira,
posters,
Uruphong Raksasad
Friday, March 25, 2016
Freelance wins at Bangkok Critics, KCL Awards
Freelance .. Ham Puay Ham Phak Ham Rak More (ฟรีแลนซ์.. ห้ามป่วย ห้ามพัก ห้ามรักหมอ a.k.a. Heart Attack) is continuing its prize-winning run of Thailand's film and entertainment awards.
On Wednesday, Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit’s hard-working comedy-drama took six prizes in Bangkok Critics Assembly Awards, including Best Film, Director, Actor, Actress and Supporting Actress.
Another major winner was The Blue Hour (Onthakan, อนธการ), It was the leading nominee with 11 nods. The dark gay thriller, which premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival last year and was recently issued on DVD in the U.S., won awards for Best Editing, Production Design and Best Score. And director and co-writer Anucha Boonyawatana was given a special prize, the Young Filmmaker Award.
Uruphong Raksasad repeated his success with his documentary The Songs of Rice (เพลงของข้าว, Pleng Khong Kao). He won Best Documentary and Best Cinematography for his poetic portrait of rice cultivation across Thailand, the same prizes he won at the Subhanahongsa Awards. Producer Pimpaka Towira joined him on stage to collect the acrylic trophy.
And another favorite of Thai critics, P'Chai My Hero a.k.a. How to Win at Checkers (Every Time), picked up one prize, best supporting actor for Thira Chutikul, who played the gay older brother of the movie's 11-year-old lead character. The child star Ingkarat Damrongsakkul had won the supporting actor prize at the Subhanahongsas.
The success for Freelance follows a major haul of Golden Swan trophies at the film industry's Subhanahongsa Awards, where it won eight prizes. Freelance, or rather Heart Attack as its known internationally, has also collected prizes on the film festival circuit, winning the ABC Award for the most entertaining film at the recent Osaka Asian Film Festival. The Nation had more on that.
There's also the Kom Chad Luek Awards, an entertainment kudos ceremony put on for 13 years now by Nation Multimedia and covering film, television and music. It awarded Freelance five prizes – Best Film, Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress, Best Actress and Best Actor. Thira Chutikul of P'Chai My Hero got the supporting actor trophy and bouquet while Anucha and The Blue Hour were upset winners in the Best Director category.
Three winning men at the Critics Awards, from left, Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit and Sunny Suwanmethanon from Freelance and Thira Chutikul of P'Chai My Hero. Nation photo by Rachanon Intharagsa |
- Best Film: Freelance Ham Puay Ham Phak Ham Rak More (Heart Attack)
- Best Director: Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, Freelance
- Best Actor: Sunny Suwanmethanon, Freelance
- Best Actress: Davika Hoorne, Freelance
- Best Supporting Actor: Thira Chutikul, P'Chai My Hero
- Best Supporting Actress: Violette Wautier, Freelance
- Best Screenplay: Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, Freelance
- Best Editing: Chonlasit Upanigkit and Anuphap Autta, The Blue Hour
- Best Cinematography: Uruphong Raksasad, Phleng Khong Khao (The Songs of Rice)
- Best Production Design: Phairot Siriwath and Vitune Tulakorn, The Blue Hour
- Best Original Score: Chupvit Temnithikul, The Blue Hour
- Best Song: Sud Sai Ta from The Down
- Best Documentary: The Songs of Rice
- Young Filmmaker Award: Anucha Boonyawatana, The Blue Hour
- Lifetime Achievement Awards: Marasri Israngkool Na Ayuthaya and Sompong Wongrakthai
(Via The Nation)
Labels:
awards,
culture,
GTH,
indie,
industry,
Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit,
Pan-Asian,
Pimpaka Towira,
Uruphong Raksasad
Wednesday, March 2, 2016
Freelance leads nominations for Subhanahongsas and Bangkok Critics
Hollywood's awards season is over, with the awarding of the Oscars on Sunday night. But now the Thai film scene is gearing up for its own onslaught of trophies, with nominees listed for two major awards, the industry's own Subhanahongsa Awards (รางวัลภาพยนตร์แห่งชาติ สุพรรณหงส์), put on by the Federation of Film Associations of Thailand, and the Bangkok Critics Assembly Awards (ชมรมวิจารณ์บันเทิง).
The leading nominee is Freelance, which is listed in most categories. Other leading nominees include P'Chai My Hero, a.k.a How to Win at Checkers (Every Time), Snap, May Nhai and The Blue Hour. There's an article in The Nation that has more details.
The Subhanahongsa Golden Swan trophies will be given out on March 13 at the Siam Pic-Ganesha Theatre in Siam Square One, while the Bangkok Critics Assembly Awards will held on March 23 at the Royal Thai Army Club.
Ready for this? Here are the nominees for both awards.
25th Thailand National Film Assocation Awards nominees
Best Film
- Snap
- P’Chai My Hero
- Freelance Ham Puay Ham Phak Ham Rak More
- Arpatti
- Onthakan
Best Director
- Josh Kim, P’Chai My Hero
- Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, Freelance
- Anucha Boonyawatana, The Blue Hour
- Chayanop Boonpakob, May Nhai
Best Actor
- Sunny Suwanmethanon, Freelance
- Toni Rakkaen, Snap
- Thiti Mahayotharak, May Nhai?
- Atthaphan Poonsawas, Onthakan
- Thira Chutikul, P’Chai My Hero
Best Actress
- Davika Hoorne, Freelance
- Ploy Sornnarin, Arpatti
- Pimchanok Luevisadpaibul, 2538 Alter Ma Jive
- Waruntorn Paonil, Snap
- Sutatta Udomsilp, May Nhai
Best Supporting Actor
- Krisana Panpeng, Snap
- Torpong Chantabubpha, Freelance
- Ingkarat Damrongsakkul, P’Chai My Hero
- Thanapop Leeratanakajorn, May Nhai
- Obnithi Wiwatanawarang Onthakan
- Sorapong Chatree, Arpatti
Best Supporting Actress
- Duangjai Hiransri, Onthakan
- Nareekul ketprapakorn, May Nhai
- Pympan Chalayanacupt, Arpatti
- Violette Wautier, Freelance
- Arpa Phawilai, Mae Bia
Best Screenplay
- Kongdej Jaturanrasamee, Snap
- Josh Kim, P’Chai My Hero
- Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, Freelance
- Anucha Boonyawatana and Wasuthep Ketpetch, Onthakan
- Chayanop Boonpakob, Vasuthorn Piyarom, Nottapon Boonprakob, Thodsapon Thiptinnakor, May Nhai
Best Editing
- Kamontorn Ekwatanakij, P’Chai My Hero
- Chonlasit Upanigkit, Freelance
- Panayu Kunvanlee, May Nhai
- Chonlasit Upanigkit and Anuphap Autta, The Blue Hour
- Kamontorn Ekwatanakij and Manussa Worrasingh, Snap
Best Cinematography
- Charnkit Chamnivikaipong, F Hiliare
- Uruphong Raksasad, Phleng Khong Khao (The Songs of Rice)
- Niramol Ross, Freelance
- Chaiyaphruk Chalermpornpanich and Kamonphan Ngewthong, Onthakan
- MR Ampornpol Yukol, Snap
Best Recording and Sound Mixing
- Kantana Sound Studio, Freelance
- Kantana Sound Studio, May Nhai
- Noppawat Likhitwong/ Onecool Sound Studio, Onthakan
- Sarawut Phantha Akrichalerm Kalayanamitr, Snap
- Ram Intra Sound Studio Arpatti
Best Art Direction
- Rasiguet Sookkarn, Snap
- Phairot Siriwath, Freelance
- Phairot Siriwath, Onthakan
- Akradej Kaewkote, May Nhai
- Salinee Khemjaras, Tee Wang Rawang Samut (The Isthmus)
Best Original Score
- Chaibandit Peuchponsub, Snap
- Bodvar Isbjornsorn, P’Chai My Hero
- Hualampong Riddim, Freelance
- Hualampong Riddim, May Nhai
- Chupvit Temnithikul Onthakan
Best Song
- Ther Dern Khao Ma from Runpee
- Mai Me Ther, from Latitude 6
- Nhai Nhai from May Nhai
- Sai Tai from 2538 Alter Ma Jive
- Sud Sai Ta from The Down
Best Documentary
- Y/our Music
- The Down
- The Songs of Rice
Best Costume Design
- Suthee Muanwaja, May Nhai
- Phim Umari, Rujirumpai Mongkol, P’Chai My Hero
- Wasitchaya Mojanakul, Mon Love Sib Muen
- Wasana Benjachat, Freelance
- Sukanya Maruangpradit, F Hiliare
Best Make Up Effects
- Benjawan Sroy-in, Freelance
- Methaphan Pitithunyapat, Phee Ha Ayothaya
- Pongrat Kijbamrung, F Hiliare
- Pattera Puttisuraseat, Runpee
- Sivakorn Suklangkan, Arpatti
Best Visual Effects
- Surreal Sutdio, Arpatti
- Thanan Chimprasert, Mon Son Phee (Ghost Ship)
- Thosaporn Poonnart, Phee Ha Ayothaya
- Alternat Studio, Runpee
- Yggdrazil Group Co and Riff Animation Studio, May Nhai
Lifetime Achievement Award
- Jaroen "See Thao" Petchjaroen
25th Bangkok Critics Assembly Awards nominees
Best Film
- Snap
- P’Chai My Hero (How to Win at Checkers (Every Time))
- Freelance Ham Puay Ham Phak Ham Rak More (Heart Attack)
- May Nhai Fai Raeng Fer (May Who?)
- Onthakan (The Blue Hour)
Best Director
- Josh Kim, P’Chai My Hero
- Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, Freelance
- Anucha Boonyawatana, Onthakan
- Uruphong Raksasad, Phleng Khong Khao (The Songs of Rice)
- Chayanop Boonpakob, May Nhai
Best Actor
- Jason Young, F Hilaire
- Sunny Suwanmethanon, Freelance
- Thiti Mahayotharak, May Nhai
- Atthaphan Poonsawas Onthakan
- Ingkarat Damrongsakkul, P’Chai My Hero
Best Actress
- Davika Hoorne ,Freelance
- Taya Rogers, Love Sucks
- Pimchanok Luevisadpaibul, Cat A Wabb # Baeb Wa Rak Ah
- Waruntorn Paonil, Snap
- Sutatta Udomsilp, May Nhai
Best Supporting Actor
- Danai Jarujinda, Arpatti
- Thira Chutikul, P’Chai My Hero
- Thanapop Leeratanakajorb, May Nhai
- Obnithi Wiwatanawarang, Onthakan
- Soraphong Chatree, Arpatti
Best Supporting Actress
- Duangjai Hiransri, Onthakan
- Nareekul ketprapakorn, May Nhai
- Ploy Sornarin, Arpatti
- Violette Wautier, Freelance
- Arpa Phawilai, Phee Ha Ayothaya
Best Screenplay
- Kongdej Jaturanrasamee, Snap
- Josh Kim, P’Chai My Hero
- Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, Freelance
- Anucha Boonyawatana and Wasuthep Ketpetch, Onthakan
- Chayanop Boonpakob, Vasuthorn Piyarom, Nottapon Boonprakob, Thodsapon Thiptinnakorn, May Nhai
Best Editing
- Uruphong Raksasad, The Songs of Rice
- Kamontorn Ekwatanakij, P’Chai My Hero
- Chonlasit Upanigkit, Freelance
- Panayu Kunvanlee, May Nhai
- Chonlasit Upanigkit and Anuphap Autta, Onthakan
Best Cinematography
- Phuttipong Aroonpheng, Vanishing Point
- Uruphong Raksasad, The Songs of Rice
- Niramol Ross, Freelance
- Chaiyaphruk Chalermpornpanich and Kamonphan Ngewthong, Onthakan
- Kittipat Jinathong, Arpatti
Best Art Direction
- Vikrom Janpanus, Vanishing Point
- Rasiguet Sookkarn, P’Chai My Hero
- Ek Iemchuen, F Hilaire
- Phairot Siriwath and Chaiwat Boonsoongnern, Freelance
- Phairot Siriwath and Vitune Tulakorn, Onthakan
Best Original Score
- Wuttipong Leetrakul, The Songs of Rice
- Bodvar Isbjornson, P’Chai My Hero
- Hualampong Riddim, Freelance
- Hualampong Riddim and Vichaya Vatanasapt, May Nhai
- Chupvit Temnithikul, Onthakan
Best Song
- Jai..Jai from Kyushu...Laew Phrung Nee Rao Khong Ja Roo Kan
- Phra Arthit Thiang Khuen
- from Water BoyyYorm from Khuen Nan
- Rao Me Rao from Khun Thongdaeng: The Inspirations
- Sud Sai Ta from The Down
Best Documentary
- Y/our Music
- The Guitar King
- Kyushu
- Mard Phayak
- The Down
- The Songs of Rice
Young Filmmaker Award
- Josh Kim, P’Chai My Hero
- Kanittha Kwunyoo, Arpatti
- Jakrawal Nilthamrong, Vanishing Point
- Surussavadi Chuarchart, F Hilaire
- Anucha Boonyawatana, Onthakan
Lifetime Achievement Awards
- Marasri Israngkool Na Ayuthaya
- Sompong Wongrakthai
Labels:
awards,
culture,
documentaries,
Five Star,
GTH,
indie,
industry,
Kongdej,
Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit,
Sahamongkol,
Uruphong Raksasad
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Cemetery of Splendour wins Best Feature at Asia Pacific Screen Awards
Presenters Sofie Formica and Anthony Chen at the ninth Asia Pacific Screen Awards in Brisbane. Photo courtesy of APSA.
Apichatpong Weerasethakul's much-acclaimed latest feature Cemetery of Splendour (รักที่ขอนแก่น, Rak Ti Khon Kaen) was named best feature film at the ninth Asia Pacific Screen Awards on Thursday night in Brisbane.
It's the second time a Thai film has won an award at the APSAs, an Australia-based ceremony that was first held in 2007. The awards recognize and promote cinematic excellence and cultural diversity of the world’s fastest-growing film region, which comprises 70 countries and areas, 4.5 billion people and is responsible for half of the world’s film output. In 2015, 39 films from 22 Asia Pacific countries and areas received APSA nominations.
Thailand's previous APSA winner was Uruphong Raksasad's Agrarian Utopia, which won the Unesco Award in 2009. A third Thai film, the documentary Citizen Juling, was also a nominee in 2009.
The full list of this year's winners can be found at the APSA website.
Cemetery of Splendour premiered to much acclaim in the Un Certain Regard section of this year's Cannes Film Festival. It has been a fixture on the circuit since then, with appearances that include the London film fest and the Pancevo Film Festival, where it shared the Lighthouse Award with Flotel Europa.
Closest Splendour is coming to Thailand this year appears to be the Singapore International Film Festival. Prospects for a Thai screening are uncertain or even unlikely, according to various interviews with the director.
Labels:
Apichatpong,
awards,
culture,
festivals,
industry,
Pan-Asian,
Uruphong Raksasad
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Lav Diaz, The Raid 2 among Asian Film Awards nominees
Demonstrating that it helps if you kick ass, Filipino auteur Lav Diaz and the Indonesian martial-arts film The Raid 2: Berandal will represent Southeast Asia at the ninth Asian Film Awards, which have once again not included any Thai films among its nominees.
Indie-cult helmer Diaz is among the best director nominees for his latest opus, From What Is Before (Mula sa Kung Ano ang Noon), which examines the profound social tattering of a village under martial law during the Marcos regime. The four-hour drama premiered in competition at last year's Locarno fest, where it won the top-prize Golden Leopard.
And the impressionist action film The Raid 2: Berandal is nominated twice, best cinematography for Matt Flannery and Dimas Imam Subhono and best editing for Gareth Evans (who also directed and made it snow in Jakarta). One-upping 2011's The Raid at every turn, in terms of scope, fight scenes, stunts and characters, The Raid 2 follows a young butt-kicking police officer (no-nonsense leading man Iko Uwais) as he takes an undercover assignment as a prison inmate. His job is to infiltrate an underworld mob that has tentacles reaching all the way to the top of the police force.
Announced yesterday, the leading nominee for the ninth Asian Film Awards is Hong Kong director Ann Hui's The Golden Era, including best director and best actress for Tang Wei.
Other best director nominees are China's Lou Ye for Blind Massage, Japan's Shinya Tsukamoto for Fires on the Plain, India's Vishal Bhardwaj for Haider and South Korea's Hong Sang-soo for Hill of Freedom.
And the Best Film nominees are China's Black Coal, Thin Ice and Blind Massage, South Korea's Hill of Freedom and Ode to My Father, Japan's The Light Shine Only There and India's Haider. Variety and Film Business Asia break it down.
As with past editions of the Asian Film Awards, most of the nominees hail from China, followed by Hong Kong/Mainland co-productions, then South Korea, Japan and India.
Thailand has been shut out of the past couple editions of the Asian Film Awards, last appearing in 2012, when the Rashomon remake U Mong Pa Mueang and Pen-ek Ratanaruang's hitman drama Headshot were up for prizes. Thai composer Chatchai Pongpraphan came away a winner for his work on the Donnie Yen martial-arts drama Wu Xia.
Another good year was 2010, when Lee Chatametikool won best editing on the Malaysian indie Karaoke, and Apichatpong Weerasethakul's Cannes-winning Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives was named Best Film in 2011.
But looking at the nominees this year, I can start to see a pattern of sorts. Thailand had some well-regarded commercial hits last year, such as the GTH romances The Teacher's Diary and the blockbuster I Fine ... Thank You ... Love You or Yuthlert Sippapak's Tukkae Rak Pang Mak, but I can't quite see those going into a dark Macau alley with Lav Diaz or the boys from The Raid 2, or even the Chinese entries Black Coal, Thin Ice or Blind Massage. They'd get clobbered.
Best chance for Thailand at the Asian Film Awards might have been with past-winner Lee's feature directorial debut Concrete Clouds, which had many strong points, especially its cast. The scrappy indie student film W. might have fit in there somewhere as well, especially for editing. Another possibility might have been Uruphong Raksasad's award-winning documentary The Songs of Rice, which could have been a contender in the editing and cinematography categories. But, being a documentary, it's off the radar for the awards. Perhaps it's time to add a documentary category, hmm?
The Asian Film Awards are set for March 25 in Macau.
Labels:
action,
Apichatpong,
awards,
indie,
industry,
Lee Chatametikool,
Pan-Asian,
Pen-ek,
stunts,
Uruphong Raksasad,
Yuthlert
Saturday, January 17, 2015
Songs of Rice hooping into Thai cinemas
My favorite film of 2014, The Songs of Rice (พลงของข้าว, Pleng Khong Kao), opens in a limited release in Thai cinemas on January 22.
Directed by Uruphong Raksasad and produced by Pimpaka Towira, The Songs of Rice is a joyous celebration of the often-lively (and even explosive) rites and festivities that accompany rice cultivation in Thailand. It premiered about a year ago at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, where it won the Fipresci Award, and made several other festival appearances. I saw it twice, at Salaya Doc and in Luang Prabang, and both times I was blown away by the film's gently building tempo and the vivid intensity of the images.
A documentary, it is the completion of a trilogy of farming films that Uruphong began with in 2005 with The Stories from the North, a collection of short stories from around his native Chiang Rai province. He followed that up with the ambitious documentary Agrarian Utopia, which followed two families growing rice by hand for a year on a small plot of land, also in Chiang Rai, way up in Thailand's North.
With The Songs of Rice, Uruphong starts out in that same location, but then moves further afield, travelling the length and breadth of the country as he documents religious ceremonies, beauty pageants, parades, communal food preparation, dancing and music. He covers the rocket festival in Yasothon in the Northeast, the buffalo races in Chonburi in the East and falls in with a travelling band of workers and their rice-harvesting spaceships in Roi Et.
Released by Extra Virgin, The Songs of Rice opens on January 22 in Bangkok's SF World Cinema at CentralWorld, and then spreads to other SF cinemas in the following weeks, hitting Chiang Mai's Maya on January 29 and Khon Kaen on February 5.
For more details, check the movie's Facebook page. There's also a trailer.
Labels:
culture,
documentaries,
indie,
Pimpaka Towira,
posters,
trailers,
Uruphong Raksasad,
videos
Friday, January 9, 2015
Top 10 Thai films of 2014
As the military strongmen took over and began to map out the country’s future, independent Thai filmmakers soldiered on in 2014 with more of their unique stories, told in a string of documentaries and dramas. And the mainstream film studios offered their own distractions, with a handful of gems among the usual crop of cross-dressing comedies, horror and weepy melodramas. Here are the 10 Thai films I most enjoyed over the past year.
The Songs of Rice (เพลงของข้าว, Pleng Kong Kao)
What’s it about? The colorfully festive rites that accompany rice cultivation across the length and breadth of Thailand are surveyed in this documentary that screened on the festival circuit last year. I saw it twice, and it blew me away both times. In Thailand, it comes to SF cinemas on January 22.
Who directed it? Uruphong Raksasad, completing his trilogy of rural films that began in 2006 with The Songs of the North and was followed by Agrarian Utopia in 2011.
Why’s it good? A genius lensman, Uruphong continues to demonstrate his knack for astonishing viewers with amazing photography. His eye-popping images are coupled with expert editing and sound design, so the blasts of those rockets in Yasothon or the thwacks of a whip on a racing buffalo in Chon Buri are all the more vivid.
Village of Hope (วังพิกุล, Wangphikul)
What’s it about? A young man on leave from the military returns to his poor farming village and feels uneasy as he gets reacquainted with his elderly relatives and the slow pace of life.
Who directed it? Boonsong Nakphoo, an indie director who specialises in hardscrabble stories, filmed with members of his own family around his hometown of Wangphikul in Sukhothai province. Village of Hope is a sequel to his 2011 effort Poor People the Great.
Why's it good? Somboon’s films are unpretentious and compelling portraits of folks who have been surpassed by society and are out of step with the increasingly urbanized, digitized, plastic-coated modern Thailand.
What’s it about? During the 1997 financial crisis, a New York currency trader (played by Ananda Everingham) returns home to Bangkok to settle affairs after the suicide of his father. While trying to bond with his younger brother (newcomer Prawith Hansten), he also seeks to rekindle romance with an ex-girlfriend (Jansuda Parnto), a former actress having mixed success as a businesswoman. And the brother strikes up a relationship with a lonely neighbor girl (Apinya Sakuljaroensuk).
Who directed it? Lee Chatametikool, making his long-awaited feature directorial debut after having helped shape Thai indie cinema as an influential film editor for the likes of Apichatpong Weerasethakul and Anocha Suwichakornpong.
Why's it good? A fantastic cast, eye-popping visuals and cool ’90s music lift Concrete Clouds, which captures the anxiety of the era with karaoke-video vignettes – super-saturated dreamy asides to the bittersweet twin romances of the screenplay.
Vengeance of the Assassin (เร็วทะลุเร็ว, Rew Talu Rew)
What’s it about? A young man (Chupong Changprung) becomes an assassin while looking for answers about the death of his parents. As he gets closer to the truth, his brother (Nathawut Boonrubsub) joins in to help.
Who directed it? Action maestro Panna Rittikrai, who died last July at age 53 of liver disease. Aside from his string of gritty action films like Born to Fight and Dynamite Warrior, Panna was best known as mentor and martial-arts choreographer to Ong-Bak and Tom-Yum-Goong star Tony Jaa, who last year broke from studio Sahamongkol to strike out on his own in Hollywood with Fast and Furious 7 and in Hong Kong on SPL2.
Why's it good? The first two minutes alone are worth seeking this out. Panna pulls out all his bone-crunching stops as he has his fighters playing combat football in a burning warehouse next to a lake of gasoline.
The Swimmers (ฝากไว้..ในกายเธอ, Fak Wai Nai Guy Ther)
What’s it about? Speedo-clad high-school swimming champions Perth and Tan come into conflict over a girl, who fell to her death from a diving platform into a drained pool.
Who directed it? Sophon Sakdapisit, GTH studio’s resident scare specialist. He previously did the 2011 psycho-thriller “Laddaland” and 2008’s “Coming Soon” and had a hand in writing the hit horrors “Shutter” and “Alone”.
Why's it good? The slickly produced flick keeps viewers off kilter with a taut psychological drama that has the added horror of having a message about teen sex.
W.
What’s it about? A brainy college freshman is thrown into the deep end of campus life when she is assigned to the faculty that was her last choice – sports – where her only friend is a slacker classmate who hopes to copy from her test papers.
Who directed it? Chonlasit Upanigkit, who made W. as his undergraduate thesis film at Silpakorn University. He had previously served as film editor on director Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit’s indie hits Mary Is Happy, Mary Is Happy and 36. A jaw-dropping three hours when he turned the film in, W. was shepherded by veteran indie filmmaker Aditya Assarat, who became a producer and guided it through an editing process that trimmed an hour off. It became bankable enough to enter the Busan film fest and secure a limited run at Bangkok’s House cinema.
Why's it good? With a burbling electronica soundtrack, moody natural lighting and overall dreaminess, W. fits solidly in the realm of “contemplative cinema” or “shoegaze”, sort of like Drive, though instead of Ryan Gosling staring blankly in silence over his steering wheel, you have college girls nattering as they double up on a bicycle for a ride across campus.
The Teacher’s Diary (คิดถึงวิทยา, Kid Tueng Wittaya)
What’s it about? A man and a woman, teachers at the same rural schoolhouse, but a year apart, fall in love over their writings in a shared diary.
Who directed it? Nithiwat Tharatorn, one of six directors of 2003’s Fan Chan, the film that built the highly successful GTH studio. He went on to direct the hit romantic dramas Season’s Change and Dear Galileo.
Why's it good? Toeing a fine line between sweetness and mawkishness, the sentimental romance mostly sticks to that line thanks to a fairly tight script, top-notch technical work, a memorable location and, of course, appealing performances by two fine lead actors, Sukrit “Bie” Wisetkaew as an ex-jock teacher whose enthusiasm makes up for his lack of brains, and Chermarn “Ploy” Boonyasak as a bright schoolteacher whose rebellious streak lands her in the rural post.
Fin Sugoi (ฟินสุโค่ย)
What’s it about? A young woman’s boyfriend becomes jealous after she gets to be in the music video of the Japanese rock star she’s been obsessed with all her life.
Who directed it? Tanwarin Sukkhapisit followed up the critically acclaimed transgender drama It Gets Better with two well-made, solidly commercial entries this year. In addition to Fin Sugoi, Tanwarin made Threesome, an entertaining romantic comedy about a woman who breaks up with her boyfriend and starts dating a ghost.
Why's it good? A surprisingly provocative script and a fun premise gives Fin Sugoi the edge over Threesome as well as the overly formulaic GTH blockbuster rom-com I Fine … Thank You … Love You. But the highlight of Fin Sugoi was the bravura performance by Apinya Sakuljaroensuk, whose portrayal of an obsessed fan was quite a departure from the usual quiet dramatic roles she lands in indie films like Concrete Clouds. She also was in a third film last year, the lesbian marriage drama 1448: Love Among Us.
Somboon (ปู่สมบรูณ์, Poo Somboon)
What’s it about? The documentary follows an elderly man as he cares for the overwhelming medical needs of his chronically ailing wife of 45 years.
Who directed it? Krisda Tipchaimeta, making his feature debut.
Why's it good? Documentaries were huge in 2014. Veteran writer-director Kongdej Jaturanrasmee turned in his first doc, So Be It, a portrait of two boys and Buddhism; and Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit did The Master, in which Kongdej and other film folk share memories about Van VDO, the infamous pirate-movie dealer. But the bittersweet Somboon, about a stand-up guy who doesn’t shirk his responsibilities, felt the most pure and poignant.
The Last Executioner (เพชฌฆาต, Petchakat)
What’s it about? The biographical drama spotlights Chavoret Jaruboon, the executioner at Bangkwang Prison, the “Bangkok Hilton”. He was the last to dispatch death-row inmates with a rifle before the switch to lethal injection.
Who directed it? Tom Waller, a Thai-Irish filmmaker who has for many years run a company that provides services to foreign movie productions. He broke into making his own indie arthouse films with 2011’s Mindfulness and Murder.
Why's it good? Chavoret struggled to reconcile his lethal duty with his Buddhist spirituality, and whether his killing in the name of justice was good or bad. Giving weight to that conflict is another excellent performance by Vithaya Pansringarm from Mindfulness and Murder and Only God Forgives, and a fine supporting cast that includes Penpak Sirikul as Chavoret’s wife and David Asavanond (Countdown) as a shadowy spirit figure. The backdrop, the inner-workings of Thailand’s prison system, is also interesting. Unfortunately, Thai audiences didn’t find the film’s morbid subject matter compelling, and The Last Executioner was largely gone from cinemas after just one week.
(Cross-published in The Nation)
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Buenos Aires está contenta with Mary Is Happy
Following its success at the awards in Thailand, Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit’s Mary Is Happy, Mary Is Happy is pleasing juries as it travels around the world, most recently picking up a special mention in the international competition at the Buenos Aires Independent Film Festival (BAFICI), which wrapped up on Sunday.
Mary Está Contenta, Mary Está Contenta was joined by another entry from Thailand's Mosquito Films Distribution, Las Canciones Del Arroz – Uruphong Raksasad's The Songs of Rice, which was in the Panorama section.
Mary also screened at the recent Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival and in Singapore as part of the Italian Film Festival, owing to Mary's genesis at the Venice Biennale College.
The Songs of Rice, meanwhile, is heading to Hot Docs in Toronto, running April 24 to May 4.
More coverage from Buenos Aires can be found at Variety and The Hollywood Reporter.
As always, you can keep track of the comings and goings of all the Mosquito Films at the company's website.
(Via Pop Pictures' Facebook)
Monday, March 31, 2014
Salaya Doc 2014 review: The Songs of Rice
- Directed by Uruphong Raksasad
- Screened as the closing film of the Salaya International Documentary Film Festival, March 29, 2014
- Wise Kwai's rating: 5/5
A crowd-pleasing jubilation, Uruphong Raksasad's The Songs of Rice (เพลงของข้าว, Pleng Khong Kao) is a poetic portrait of the various rituals and celebrations that accompany the cultivation of rice in Thailand.
It starts off quietly and gently, with only the sounds of chirping birds and the buzz of insects, and slowly builds up until it explodes. The sounds and tempo then gradually trail off until the movie is right back where it started.
As with Uruphong's previous features, Stories from the North and Agrarian Utopia, genius camerawork is the highlight. Uruphong shoots the moon and then zooms back out to focus on the head of a grasshopper.
He does this a lot, showing you something pretty amazing and then turning the camera to reveal something even more astonishing. One early dramatic scene involves a Buddhist temple blessing procession, featuring worshippers in white parading along a rural road with a pair of elephants. The procession leads to a hilltop temple adorned by a golden stupa. Fans of Agrarian Utopia will recognize the place. If all that isn't enough, there's a guy riding a para-glider, flying around above it all.
The Songs of Rice completes a trilogy for the director. Stories from the North was a compilation of vignettes of the director's neighbors in his native rural Chiang Rai, while Agrarian Utopia followed a pair of farming families as they struggled to make ends meet while growing rice by hand on a single plot of land in Chiang Rai.
That same spot in Thailand's far North is revisited in The Songs of Rice, but Uruphong casts his gaze further afield, filming up and and down the countryside. Places visited include Chon Buri on the Eastern Seaboard, for the water-buffalo races, and in Isaan, the Northeast, the bang-fai (rocket) festival in Yasothon and a visit with the travelling families and their spacecraft-like harvesting machines in Roi Et.
The rocket festival, an annual rite in which homemade rockets are launched in a prayer for fertility and abundance, has been depicted before in such movies as Kim Mordaunt's The Rocket and Panna Rittikrai's Dynamite Warrior. But there's another element of the festival that's probably not as widely depicted – along with the the usual bamboo and blue-PVC-pipe projectiles, there is also the spinning discs that spiral into the sky. These fertilizer-fueled Frisbees are huge – one is hauled in on a 10-wheel truck and placed on the launchpad with a crane. The men use long burning sticks to set off the fuse, made of old monk's robes, and then run and jump for cover behind a mound of dirt. When the rockets work, it's pretty dramatic and beautiful, but when they don't work, it's also pretty dramatic and beautiful.
And is if exploding rockets aren't enough, there's music and dance performances to further liven things up. Cross-dressing men, likely inebriated, bang drums and play traditional instruments. A beautiful transgender person prepares a spicy somtum-and-sticky-rice feast – watch for the symbolism of the mortar and pestle. Steaming sticky sweet dessert is ritually prepared – mounds of it. A granny hula hoops, teetering on the edge of a rice paddy. A rotund dancer waggles her behind to the delight of a provincial governor and other dignataries. A beauty queen rides in a golden cart pulled by water buffalo. It's a rig that the gods could use to fly across the sky.
Communities, young and old, pull together to celebrate. In this time of troubled politics polarizing Thai society, The Songs of Rice is a healing message. It gets back to the basics of stuff that really matters – traditions, culture, spirituality, food and just plain living.
Capping off the closing day of the Salaya International Documentary Film Festival, The Songs of Rice, along with Soundtrack for a Revolution and Cambodian director Rithy Panh's The Missing Picture, left me to ponder what really matters. The right to be treated like a human being. Honoring the haunting memories of family members who died at the hands of a genocidal regime. The act of growing the food that sustains us. These are basic things I think Thailand's warring political parties have lost sight of in their fight to protect their own comparatively petty, selfish interests.
There's nothing really political about The Songs of Rice, but with politics tearing apart the country right now, it's hard for me to come to any other conclusion than I just have.
Related posts:
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Salaya Doc 2014: Premieres set for Songs of Rice, Missing Picture
Just two weeks away, the fourth Salaya International Documentary Film Festival is still coming together, but festival organizers have a few confirmed entries, among them the Thai premieres for the Rotterdam award-winner The Songs of Rice and the Oscar-nominated Best Foreign Language Film The Missing Picture.
The opening film will be At Berkeley, a brand-new work by documentarian Frederic Wiseman. Running for four hours, it chronicles the debate over tuition increases and budget cuts at the University of California at Berkeley.
The Songs of Rice, the latest feature by Agrarian Utopia director Urupong Raksasad, will be the closing film. It was among a big crop of Thai films at this year's International Film Festival Rotterdam, where it made its world premiere and was given the Fipresci Award.
The Missing Picture, the first Foreign Language Film nominee for Cambodia at the Academy Awards, is the latest work by Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh to examine the legacy of the Khmer Rouge. It combines archival footage and uses clay figures of his vanished family members in a bid to reconstruct fading memories. It makes its Thai premiere in a special screening.
Another special screening will be Receiving Torpedo Boat (การรับเรือตอร์ปิโด), 1935 footage by pioneering Thai cinematographer Luang Kolakarn Jan-Jit (Pao Wasuwat) about the Royal Thai Navy going to Italy to acquire two torpedo boats. The film was added last year to the Registry of Films as National Heritage.
The Director in Focus this year is Kazuhiro Soda, with screenings of two of his films, Campaign and Campaign 2
๊ื
There will also be a selection of UK-produced documentaries co-presented by the British Council – Rough Aunties, Requiem for Detroit, Moving to Mars and Soundtrack for a Revolution.
Details are still being hammered out on the entries in this year's Southeast Asian documentary competition.
The fest runs from March 22 to 29 at the Thai Film Archive in Salaya, Nakhon Pathom with a concurrent program at the Bangkok Art and Culture Center from March 25 to 28 and March 30.
For more details, keep an eye on Salaya Doc's Facebook page.
The opening film will be At Berkeley, a brand-new work by documentarian Frederic Wiseman. Running for four hours, it chronicles the debate over tuition increases and budget cuts at the University of California at Berkeley.
The Songs of Rice, the latest feature by Agrarian Utopia director Urupong Raksasad, will be the closing film. It was among a big crop of Thai films at this year's International Film Festival Rotterdam, where it made its world premiere and was given the Fipresci Award.
The Missing Picture, the first Foreign Language Film nominee for Cambodia at the Academy Awards, is the latest work by Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh to examine the legacy of the Khmer Rouge. It combines archival footage and uses clay figures of his vanished family members in a bid to reconstruct fading memories. It makes its Thai premiere in a special screening.
Another special screening will be Receiving Torpedo Boat (การรับเรือตอร์ปิโด), 1935 footage by pioneering Thai cinematographer Luang Kolakarn Jan-Jit (Pao Wasuwat) about the Royal Thai Navy going to Italy to acquire two torpedo boats. The film was added last year to the Registry of Films as National Heritage.
The Director in Focus this year is Kazuhiro Soda, with screenings of two of his films, Campaign and Campaign 2
๊ื
There will also be a selection of UK-produced documentaries co-presented by the British Council – Rough Aunties, Requiem for Detroit, Moving to Mars and Soundtrack for a Revolution.
Details are still being hammered out on the entries in this year's Southeast Asian documentary competition.
The fest runs from March 22 to 29 at the Thai Film Archive in Salaya, Nakhon Pathom with a concurrent program at the Bangkok Art and Culture Center from March 25 to 28 and March 30.
For more details, keep an eye on Salaya Doc's Facebook page.
Labels:
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Sunday, February 2, 2014
IFFR 2014: Songs of Rice wins Fipresci Award
The Songs of Rice, the new documentary by Uruphong Raksasad, won the Fipresci Award at the 43rd International Film Festival Rotterdam.
Making its world premiere in the Bright Future program, The Songs of Rice (Pleng Khong Kao) is about such rites as rocket festivals, buffalo races and other traditions that are connected to rice cultivation in Thailand. It is Uruphong's third feature, following his collection of short rural tales Stories from the North and his farm-family portrait Agrarian Utopia.
The Jury of the Fédération Internationale de la Presse Cinématographique selected it as the winner of all the 22 world premieres in Bright Future 2014. “Fully relying on its strong cinematography, it creates an immersive sensory experience that makes us part of a vivid community revolving around the cultivation of a tiny grain,” Fipresci said.
The Songs of Rice, produced by Pimpaka Towira and handled by the new company Mosquito Films Distribution, was among a large selection of Thai indie films at Rotterdam this year.
The main competition, the Tiger Awards for first or second-time features, included the European premiere of Concrete Clouds, the feature directorial debut of long-time film editor Lee Chatametikool.
The Tiger Awards went to filmmakers from Japan, Sweden and South Korea: Anatomy of a Paper Clip (Yamamori clip koujo no atari) by Ikeda Akira, Something Must Break (Nånting måste gå sönder) by Ester Martin Bergsmark and Han Gong-Ju by Lee Su-Jin.
Rotterdam also has a jury from the Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema, and the NETPAC Award when to 28 by Prasanna Jayakody from Sri Lanka.
There's a trailer for The Songs of Rice posted by IFFR. It's embedded below.
Friday, January 24, 2014
IFFR 2014: Top Thai indie filmmakers launch Mosquito Films Distribution
The Mosquito people, from left, Anocha, Aditya, Soros, Apichatpong, Lee, Pimpaka and Sompot. |
Leading Thai independent filmmakers – directors Aditya Assarat, Anocha Suwichakornpong, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Lee Chatametikool, Pimpaka Towira and producer Soros Sukhum – have banded together to start Mosquito Films Distribution.
The launch of the new company was announced this week at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, where several Mosquito titles are screening, among them Lee's debut feature Concrete Clouds, the world premiere of Uruphong Raksasad's The Songs of Rice, Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit's Mary Is Happy, Mary Is Happy and the omnibus Letters from the South.
Sompot “Boat” Chidgasornpongse, among the attendees at this year's Berlin Talent Campus, has been named as the company's general manager.
Here's more from the company's website:
The new company will handle international sales and festival distribution for the partners’ films as well as upcoming titles from the new generation of Southeast Asian filmmakers. The focus is on maximizing the potential of each individual film as well as aggregating the content into curated programs for festivals and educational institutions with a focus on Southeast Asian cinema.
Says Weerasethakul, “We are so busy day to day that we sometimes forget we have amassed quite a beautiful set of movies. I think its time we unite and share these films to the world. I, for one, am fascinated by the aesthetic of the new Thai films. I am certain we are heading towards something more and more innovative”.
Mosquito Films Distribution will kick off operations at the 2014 Rotterdam Film Festival with a high profile selection of new and recent films: Concrete Clouds, directed by Chatametikool and co-produced by Weerasethakul, The Songs of Rice, directed by Uruphong Raksasad and produced by Towira, Mary Is Happy, Mary Is Happy, directed by Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit and produced by Assarat, and the omnibus feature Letters from the South, co-directed by Assarat, Tsai Ming-Liang, Tan Chui Mui, Royston Tan, Midi Z, and Sun Koh, and produced by Tan Chui Mui.
Says Assarat, “we are all friends who have collaborated during the productions of our previous films. The new company is about extending that collaboration into distribution as well. Our strategy is to start with our own titles while at the same time finding and introducing to the world the next generation of filmmakers. We want to be the brand that comes to mind when you think of Southeast Asian cinema.”
The partners have hired Sompot Chidgasornpongs as General Manager. Chidgasornpongs, along with Towira, Sukhum and Chatametikool will be present at Rotterdam and Berlin to introduce the new venture and meet with potential clients.
Upcoming projects from Mosquito Films include So Be It by Kongdej Jaturanrasmee, By the Time It Gets Dark by Anocha, Beer Girl by Wichanon Somumjarn and Railway Sleepers, the long-in-the-works debut feature by Sompot. It was previously known as Are We There Yet?
Current offerings from the company also include a collection of Apichatpong’s short films, going all the way back to his first in 1994, 0116643225059 to 2012’s Cactus River.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
IFFR 2014: World premieres for The Songs of Rice, Supernatural
World premieres of new features by celebrated Thai indie filmmakers Uruphong Raksadad and Thunska Pansittivorakul are among the highlights of yet another strong Thai selection at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, which has just completed its schedule.
Uruphong has The Songs of Rice (Pleng khong kao) premiering in the Bright Future program. It's a followup to his 2009 sophomore feature documentary Agrarian Utopia
.
Here's the synopsis:
In Thailand, a hymn to rice need not always be sung. A dance, or spectacular homemade fireworks can say the same thing. As can a film, as is convincingly demonstrated by this lyrical, beautifully filmed homage to this essential staple food.
In Thailand, rice is the basis of every meal. Little wonder then that the crop is praised in many ways. In this lyrical film, the rice cycle is given a musical accompaniment - from the moment the crop is planted in endless, moist fields beneath spectacular cloudy skies until the cooked rice is shared out in temples.
A significant part of the film is dedicated to the harvest celebrations, at which men race on bulls and set off huge (and potentially deadly) homemade fireworks, and women swathed in gleaming, colourful fabrics and headpieces move seductively to hypnotic, drawn-out beats.
There are songs praising the qualities of rice, songs about harvesting and preparing it - some simple, some accompanied by an exuberant film clip. And there are moments when the pace slackens - literally - when the images speak for themselves, in slow motion, and tell a story of deep-rooted traditions and affinity with the land that produces this celebrated foodstuff.
Thunska's latest opus is Supernatural (Nua dhamma chat), which makes its bow in the festival's Spectrum lineup. It looks to be exploring similar themes as 2010's Reincarnate and 2011's The Terrorists except that it's a fictional narrative feature – his first – marking a departure from his past efforts, which have all been documentaries or hybrid documentary dramas.
Here's the synopsis:
Science fiction about a future Thailand. Futuristic, experimental, homo-erotic and with elements of a political essay. With a richness of themes and impressions that wouldn’t get past the censor in Thailand. The maker doesn’t mince his words and isn’t afraid to look reality in the eye.
In a futurist world, the Thai kingdom has been transformed by ‘The Leader’ into 'the Realm of people who have done good deeds and earned merits'. It’s a nice place to be, even though the inhabitants are plagued by an indefinable nostalgia. In the old days, people could at least touch each other. Although the Realm has reached version 2.0, technical possibilities remain limited.
This wondrous story of the future is interwoven with stories set in the present and past. According to Pansittivorakul, known for his independently-produced and taboo-breaking documentaries on homosexuality and politics, his first feature is science fiction, yet it is about today’s Thailand. For instance he criticises the need for religion and superstition.
But in the end, this very idiosyncratic, homo-erotically charged essay is above all about time: ‘Time influences everything. The past has to do with the present, and the present is linked to the future.’
Dateline Bangkok has more about Supernatural, which similar to The Terrorists, is unlikely to ever be publicly screened in Thailand.
In the main Tiger Awards competition is previously announced Concrete Clouds, the feature directorial debut by well-known film editor Lee Chatametikool, which makes its European premiere following its debut in competition at last year's Busan International Film Festival.
Concrete Clouds received a lot of support from the IFFR's Hubert Bals Fund, which this year celebrates 25 years with a special program, Mysterious Objects – 25 Years of the Hubert Bals Fund. the title of course refers to Apichatpong Weerasethakul's 2000 debut feature, the experimental documentary Mysterious Object at Noon. It, alongside films by the likes of Chen Kaige, Carlos Reygadas and Elia Suleiman, will once again grace the big screen in Rotterdam.
Coincidentally, Apichatpong is among the producers of Concrete Clouds, with Lee having been the editor of most of Apichatpong's features.
Another European premiere is Letters from the South, an omnibus project about the Chinese diaspora in Southeast Asia. Among the six directors taking part is Thailand's Aditya Assarat, who describes between Paula and her friends, who have Chinese roots, with her cousin Mumu, who was born in China. Other segments are by Singapore's Royston Tan and Sun Koh, Myanmar's Midi Z and Malaysia's Tan Chui Mui. Tsai Ming-liang, also born in Malaysia, observes the seventh-storey apartment in which he grew up as a child.
Also in the Bright Future is the popular Mary Is Happy, Mary Is Happy by Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, whose feature debut 36 was in the Tiger Awards competition last year.
The Thai selection is rounded out with a pair entries in the Spectrum Shorts program – Pimpaka Towira's Thai-Myanmar border drama Malaria and Mosquitos and Sorayos Prapapan's mistreated-maid tale Boonrerm.
Looks like another big year for indie Thai filmmakers freezing their butts off in the Netherlands. The International Film Festival Rotterdam runs from January 22 to February 2.
Friday, October 5, 2012
25 more films picked for Thai historical registry
A still from Chok Song Chan (Double Luck). Only about one minute of the 1927 film survives. |
King Rama VIII's arrival in Bangkok, a fragment of a 1927 silent and aerial footage of Bangkok being bombed during World War II are among the additions this year to the Thai Culture Ministry's Registry of Films as National Heritage.
The listing by the Culture Ministry and the Thai Film Archive coincides with Thai Film Conservation Day. The registry was initiated last year with 25 entries, and this year's list has 25 more historic films.
From 1938, King Rama VIII's Arrival in Thailand is "rare and precious" footage, archive director Dome Sukwong was quoted as saying by The Nation today. The newsreel chronicles the arrival of 13-year-old King Ananda Mahidol and members of his family, including his younger brother, the present king, the Princess Mother and sister Princess Galyani Vadhana. Picked as king when he was 9 years old, the boy monarch was born in Germany and raised overseas. He was chosen king after the abdication of King Rama VII, following a coup that established the constitutional monarchy.
The earliest entry on this year's list is 1927's Chok Song Chan (โชคสองชั้น, Double Luck), the first film produced by a Thai company, the Sri Krung studio. Before then, there was the Hollywood co-production Miss Suwanna of Siam, which has been lost. King Kong director Merian Cooper's jungle adventure Chang was made around the same time. But Double Luck is considered the first actual Thai feature film. Unfortunately, all that remains is about 82 feet – around 1 minute – of a car chase.
The World War II footage was shot aboard a B-29 bomber on December 14, 1944. Thailand, having been occupied by Japan, actually issued a declaration of war against the Allied powers. Another news clip from the World War II era is a parade of soldiers fighting for the Seri Thai or Free Thai movement, which was opposed to the Japanese occupation and the totalitarian Thai government of the time.
An interesting artifact is 1967's Gnathostoma Spinigerum and Gnathostomiasis in Thailand, a short film made by a Thai physician to present his findings about roundworms and the illness caused by them.
Another historic reel is the first Thai animated film, 1955's Hed Mahassajan (The Miraculous Incident), by the "Walt Disney of Thailand", Payut Ngaokrachang. The short depicts a humorous city outing by a gentleman – Payut himself – and culminates in a traffic pileup caused by a policeman being distracted by a popped button on an attractive lady's outfit.
Feature films on the list include the 1958 musical drama Dark Heaven, the first color film by pioneering auteur RD Pestonji. There's also 1959's Mae Nak Phra Khanong, the first of many adaptations of the famous legend of the ghost wife.
The romantic drama Reun Pae (The Houseboat) from 1961 is another enduring classic. Even today, youngsters can hum along to the theme song. Historic for a number of reasons, it was a Hong Kong co-production and was shot on 35mm with sound, rare for the era when post-dubbed 16mm films were still prevalent. It was chosen for restoration through a grant by Technicolor and the Thomson Foundation a few years ago.
Iconic screen couple Mitr Chaibancha and Petchara Chaowarat star in the 1965 entry, the sprawling musical comedy Ngern Ngern Ngern (Money, Money, Money) and 1970's action drama Insee Tong (Golden Eagle), which Mitr died making, being killed in a fall from a helicopter while filming the last scene. Petchara's first film, 1961's The Love Diary of Pimchawee, is also on the list.
Even the costumed B-movie antics of notorious cult director Sompote Sands are honored in this year's list, with Hanuman vs Seven Superheroes from 1974 making the cut. It has footage of Thai mythological characters intercut with footage from a Japanese Ultraman movie.
There are also examples of "social problem" movies, with Kru Bannok (The Country Teacher) from 1978 and MC Chatrichalerm Yukol's taxi-driver drama The Citizen starring Sorapong Chatree from 1977. Another social-realism stalwart, Vichit Kounavudhi, is represented with his early effort, 1961's Hands of a Thief.
Newer notable films are also included, such as 1999's gritty urban homelessness drama Kon Jorn. The most recent entry on the list being Uruphon Raksasad's award-winning farmer drama Sawan Ban Na (Agrarian Utopia) from 2009.
Registry of Films as National Heritage, 2012
- Chok Song Chan (เรื่องโชคสองชั้น , Double Luck), 1927
- Cheewit Kon 2475 (ชีวิตก่อน 2475, Life Before 1932, 1930
- Hae Rattathamanoon (แห่รัฐธรรมนูญ , National Constitution Parade, 1933
- King Rama VIII's Arrival in Thailand, 1938
- The bombing of Bangkok, 1944
- Seri Thai March, 1945
- Hed Mahassajan (เหตุมหัศจรรย์ , The Miraculous Incident), 1955
- Sawan Meud (สวรรค์มืด , Dark Heaven), 1958
- Mae Nak Phra Khanong (แม่นาคพระโขนง), 1959
- World Boxing Championship, match between Hua Hin native Pon Kingphetch and Argentina's Pascal Peres, Bangkok, 1960
- Meu Jon (มือโจร, Hands of a Thief), 1961
- Reun Phae (เรือนแพ , The House Boat), 1961
- Bunteuk Rak Khong Pimchawee (บันทึกรักของพิมพ์ฉวี, The Love Diary of Pimchawee), 1962
- Ngern Ngern Ngern (เงิน เงิน เงิน, Money, Money, Money), 1965
- Saneh Bangkok (เสน่ห์บางกอก , Charming Bangkok), 1966
- Gnathostoma Spinigerum and Gnathostomiasis in Thailand, 1967
- A Drug Inmate's Execution by Firing Squad, 1967
- Insee Thong (อินทรีทอง, Golden Eagle), 1970
- The Dalai Lama Visits Suan Mokkh, 1972
- Hanuman Pob 7 Yod Manut (หนุมานพบ 7 ยอดมนุษย์ , Hanuman vs the Seven Superheroes, 1974
- Thongpoon Khokpho Rassadon Temkhan (ทองพูน โคกโพ ราษฎรเต็มขั้น, The Citizen), 1977
- Kru Bannok (ครูบ้านนอก, The Country Teacher), 1978
- Muang Nai Mhok (เมืองในหมอก , City in the Mist), 1978
- Kon Jorn (คนจร ฯลฯ ), 1999
- Sawan Ban Na (สวรรค์บ้านนา, Agrarian Utopia), 2009
Kong Rithdee further details the list in his article today in the Bangkok Post.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
16th Thai Short Film and Video Festival opens with Apichatpong's Ashes
The 16th Thai Short Film and Video Festival gets underway this week at the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, screening some of the best Thai independent and student shorts as well as special programmes of films from all over the world.
It all starts at 5.30pm on Thursday with the local premiere of Ashes, one of the latest by Cannes Palme d'Or winner Apichatpong Weerasethakul. Premiered earlier this year on the sidelines of the Cannes Film Festival, the 20-minute experimental work was shot with the retro hand-cranked Lomokino 35mm-film camera. It's politically tinged, with Article 112, the controversial lese majeste law, credited among the "stars". Also in the cast is King Kong, not the giant ape, but Apichatpong's dog.
Other shorts in the opening are Pitch Black Heist, starring Michael Fassbender, which is part of the Bafta shorts package sponsored by the British Council, Thailand, and Il Capo, a look inside an Italian marble quarry that's part of the annual Best of Clermont-Ferrand package from the French short-film fest that's the biggest in the world. The opening night will also feature shorts by French comedy legend Jacques Tati.
One of many special programmes is from Friends Without Borders, a Chiang Mai NGO that works with the migrant community. It includes the latest from director Supamok Silarak, The Assembly of the Samurais, a behind-the-scenes feature documentary on the Friends Without Borders Holding Hands filmmaking workshop that brought together five ethnic filmmakers. It premiered earlier this year at Chiang Mai's Fly Beyond the Barbwire Fence Festival.
The shorts from the workshop will also be shown: Ja Daw's Choices, a romantic drama that's the first film by young Lahu Mo Tha, who is the main subject of The Assembly of the Samurais; A Comb and A Buckle, a family drama by Ja Bue, another young Lahu; Jabo Means the Man of Fortune, an action-drama by Lahu director Maitree Chamroensuksakul; Ta Mu La, a refugee's tale by Saw Shee Keh Sher, a Karen environmental activist and When the Sky's Color Changes, a comedy by Hmong NGO leader Insree Khampeepanyakul about a district chief who unwittingly travels to a future in which the only safe places on earth are highland villages. Both Ta Mu La and Jabo were prize-winners at the Barbwire fest.
One of the Thai Short Film and Video Festival's annual programmes focuses on "queer" shorts, which this year takes a tuneful twist with Queer Musical! The programme offers five shorts focusing: Skallamann by Maria Bock from Norway; Boy Meets Boy by Gwang-soo Kim Jho from South Korea; Au Clair de la Lune by Dominique Filhol and Antoine Espagne from France; Slut the Musical by Tonnette Stanford from Australia and Put Your Fur Up by Thai filmmaker Phuwadon Torasint.
Spiritual matters are addressed in Dhamma Shorts, featuring three new works by well-known Thai filmmakers. Sang-Yen by Sivaroj Kongsakul; I Dreamed a Dream by Chookiat Sakveerakul and In the Farm by Uruphong Raksasad. All premiered earlier this year at the Buddhist International Film Festival Bangkok.
More pressing worries are examined in Apocalypse Now – not the Vietnam War epic, but a package of shorts by three filmmakers on the end of the world. They are Portrait of the Universe Napat Treepalawisetkun; L' Attaque du Monstre Géant Suceur de Cerveaux de l'Espace and Armadingen by Germany's Philipp Kaessbohrer.
Another compilation is this year's selection from the Digital Project of South Korea's Jeonju International Film Festival, featuring works by three Asian filmmakers: The Great Cinema Party by the Philippines' Raya Martin; Light in Yellow Breathing Space by Sri Lanka's Vimukthi Jayasundara; and When Night Falls by China's Ying Liang.
Another annual feature of the Thai Short Film and Video Fest is the S-Express packages of shorts from around the region. This year features programmes from the Philippines,Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia.
Of course the main reason for the festival is the competition sections for new Thai indie shorts, student films, Thai animation, short documentaries and international filmmakers.
The festival runs daily from Thursday until August 26 except Monday at the Bangkok Art and Culture Center.
Screenings will be in the fifth-floor auditorium and in the fourth-floor conference room. Admission is free.
For more details, search for "16th Thai Short Film and Video Festival" on Facebook or visit www.ThaiFilm.com.
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
IBFF 2012 Bangkok review: Thai Panorama
On the Farm, by Uruphong Raksasasad. |
Six films – five shorts and a feature – were brought together for the Thai Panorama at the International Buddhist Film Festival 2012 Bangkok.
The shorts were a mix of old and new with 2007's Emerald (Morakot, มรกต) by Apichatpong Weerasethakul leading off the package and taking on new significance as a Buddhist parable. Originally conceived as a video loop for an art installation, Emerald was filmed in the derelict Morakot hotel at the corner of Thong Lor and Petchaburi roads in Bangkok. The hotel still stands there, with an outdoor beer garden on the grounds doing a brisk business each night. Apichatpong's usual cast members Jenjira Pongpas and Sakda Kaewbuadee take on the roles of spirits who tell their stories to each other until they no longer exist. According to the festival program, it's inspired by the 1906 Buddhist novel, "In the Pilgrim Kamanita". Meanwhile, the camera pans lazily around an old room in the now-closed hotel, with the bed still made, oddly, but there's a weird stain on the sheets. TVs are stacked in the hallway. And feathers, or maybe snow, are falling or floating, thanks to work by a special-effects studio.
Nirvana (นิพพาน), a 2008 by Siwadol Rathee that was previously shown in the 14th Thai Short Film and Video Festival and programmed short as part of the travelling S-Express Thailand package, is about a young man who wants to be ordained according to his mother's wishes that she see her son enter the monkhood in her lifetime. Problem is, the young man is blind, which prevents him from being able-bodied enough to carry the message. Nirvana also questions the motivations behind the mother's merit-making, a driving component of contemporary Thai Buddhist culture.
The inaugural edition of Bangkok's Buddhist film fest also commissioned three new shorts by well-known filmmakers, Sivaroj Kongsakul, Chookiat Sakveerakul and Uruphong Raksasad.
All are extensions of recent work by them.
Sang-Yen (แสงเย็น) by Sivaroj could very well be inserted into his award-winning debut feature Eternity (Tee-Rak). With the same cast as Sivaroj's partly autobiographical Eternity, a young-adult son and daughter sit down for dinner with their mother and talk about relationships, business and life. The mother wonders if her son will ever ordain as a monk. Father is missing, which goes unspoken but still carries weight. The family parts after dinner, with the offspring going their separate ways from their rural-village home, with the son driving off into the sunset listening to a dharma tape.
I Dreamed a Dream (ในฝัน) by Chookiat plays like a lost segment from his recent feature Home. The festival program says it's about a man who feels attached to things and feelings and is full of anger and hatred. But it's mainly about friends driving around Chiang Mai, talking about a ghost of a man who drowned in the city moat. While it was experimental and wildly entertaining, I had a hard time figuring out what's Buddhist about it.
In the Farm (ในสวน) by Uruphong is an extension of themes he explored in his acclaimed feature Agrarian Utopia, about the use of chemicals in farming. A young woman who spends her days on a rubber plantation clearing weeds by hand, gets into a debate with her mother over the use of pesticides and fertilizer. The mother is all for it because it would mean the end of back-breaking work and probably result in a higher yield of rubber sap. But the young woman sees fields below, where the family's food is grown, and worries about contaminating the water well. Again, I'd have to have an expert explain to me what's specifically Buddhist about this, but it is an enlightened discussion, environment-wise. And it's capped off with close-up, high-def shots of insects and reptiles, which would surely perish if chemicals were used.
Three Marks of Existence. |
The festival also featured the world premiere of a new feature, Three Marks of Existence (นมัสเตอินเดีย ส่งเกรียนไปเรียนพุทธ) by Gunparwitt Phuwadolwisid.
A road movie about a young man's pilgrimage to significant Buddhist sites in India and Nepal, it was supported by the Culture Ministry's Strong Thailand fund.
Basically, it's a low-budget Citizen Dog on a Buddhist pilgrimage, with same type of whimsical, wry humor and episodic nature as Wisit Sasanatiang's 2004 comedy.
The main character is M (Yossawat Sittiwong), a twenty-something guy who is having difficulty finding a job after graduating from college. When his girlfriend breaks up with him, he decides to go in search for answers at the major Buddhist pilgrimage sites.
His first stop is Bodh Gaya, the place of Lord Buddha's enlightenment. Staying at the Thai temple there, he shares a room with an older man (Wanchai Thanawangnoi), who is into meditation, seemingly addicted to it for its supernatural properties. At one point, he sees a ghost while meditating by a swimming pool. M makes an assumption about the man's motivations for meditating, which later turns out to be a false assumption.
Hiring a taxi – another situation played for humor – M spends nine hours crammed into the back seat with a sleeping Indian man's head on his shoulder headed to Sarnath, the place of Buddha's first sermon. There, he introduces himself to an attractive young Japanese woman, Yuiko (Kobayashi Ayako), and the two become travelling companions as they take in the sights and discuss Buddhist scripture.
But then there's a hitch in M's plans to get closer to the woman when another Thai guys turns up. Slightly older than M, Jen (Patchrakul Jungsakul) comes from a wealthy background and was a playboy before he set off on the road to enlightenment. Yuiko is of course attracted to Jen, which causes M to be jealous.
The trio takes in the sights around Kusinara, where Lord Buddha died, with Jen expertly negotiating a ride with the same taxi that had earlier ripped M off.
M takes action to prevent Jen from travelling with them to Nepal, which it turns out was unneeded because Jen planned to head his separate way anyway.
So M has Yuiko all to himself in Lumbini, the birthplace of the Lord Buddha, and they grow closer as they head back to India and go their separate ways.
In his travels, M encounters a Thai monk (Saifah Tanthana), who offers wisdom for M to mull over as he heads back to Thailand.
The proceedings are enlivened by motion-graphic animation that introduces each character, and by the animated "yes" or "no" motif of M's travel journal, in which he records his likes and dislikes as well as things to do and not to do.
The world-premiere screening itself was a lesson in Buddhist tolerance and humility after more movie-goers than seats turned up, thanks to double-booking of complimentary seats. But some chairs were set up in the aisle to accommodate those folks.
The International Buddhist Film Festival 2012 Bangkok opened on June 6 with a screening of The Light of Asia, a 1925 German-Indian silent that was previously banned in Thailand, according to reports. Playing at the Scala theater, the movie was accompanied by live music from a band of Thai and Indian traditional musicians.
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