When will Chulayarnnon Siriphol’s short film Birth of Golden Snail (กำเนิดหอยทากทอง) emerge from its shell? The film has been in limbo for the past seven weeks, and is effectively banned from the Thailand Biennale in Krabi.
Birth of Golden Snail was inspired by the history and myths associated with Krabi’s Khao Khanabnam cave, and was intended as a site-specific installation to be projected in 35mm directly onto the cave wall. It presents fragments of the area’s past, including its status as a camp for Japanese soldiers during World War II. The twenty-minute film was made in black-and-white, and shot on 16mm.
At a preview screening of Birth of Golden Snail on 17th October, the Office of Contemporary Art and Culture raised several objections, claiming that its portrayal of a pregnant schoolgirl set a bad example, and that an out-of-focus shot of her breasts was indecent. As Chulayarnnon told me in an interview last week (for the forthcoming book Thai Cinema Uncensored), the OCAC were also concerned that the representation of Japanese soldiers “can make a bad relationship between Thailand and Japan.” What’s more, a resident of Krabi even posted a death threat on Facebook, accusing the director of disrespecting local culture.
The OCAC asked Chulayarnnon to cut the film, though he declined to do so, as he explained in a Facebook post: “the committee asked me to re-edit and cut some scenes out from the film because they were afraid of negative feedback from local people in Krabi. I understood the comments from the committee but I refused to censor my film”. On 1st November, on the eve of the Biennale’s opening, the OCAC wrote to the director confirming that the film could not be shown without cuts.
The OCAC cited the Film and Video Act, § 29, to justify their ban, though the paragraph in question states: “if the Film and Video Censorship Committee considers any film as having content which undermines or is contrary to public order or good morals, or may affect the security and dignity of Thailand, the Film and Video Censorship Committee shall have the power to order an applicant to edit or cut off the scene before granting approval”. In other words, the power of movie censorship rests with the Film and Video Censorship Committee (which did not view the film), rather than the OCAC.
After this legally questionable verdict, the film was excluded from the Biennale, and Chulayarnnon’s negotiations with the OCAC have since been moving at a snail’s pace. As he said in last week’s interview, he is defending freedom of expression and setting a precedent: “I use this film as a case study, to understand and question the system. I don’t fight for myself, but I fight for the next film, the next project in the future.” The Biennale runs until 28th February next year, though it remains to be seen whether Birth of Golden Snail will be aborted or not.
Birth of Golden Snail was inspired by the history and myths associated with Krabi’s Khao Khanabnam cave, and was intended as a site-specific installation to be projected in 35mm directly onto the cave wall. It presents fragments of the area’s past, including its status as a camp for Japanese soldiers during World War II. The twenty-minute film was made in black-and-white, and shot on 16mm.
At a preview screening of Birth of Golden Snail on 17th October, the Office of Contemporary Art and Culture raised several objections, claiming that its portrayal of a pregnant schoolgirl set a bad example, and that an out-of-focus shot of her breasts was indecent. As Chulayarnnon told me in an interview last week (for the forthcoming book Thai Cinema Uncensored), the OCAC were also concerned that the representation of Japanese soldiers “can make a bad relationship between Thailand and Japan.” What’s more, a resident of Krabi even posted a death threat on Facebook, accusing the director of disrespecting local culture.
The OCAC asked Chulayarnnon to cut the film, though he declined to do so, as he explained in a Facebook post: “the committee asked me to re-edit and cut some scenes out from the film because they were afraid of negative feedback from local people in Krabi. I understood the comments from the committee but I refused to censor my film”. On 1st November, on the eve of the Biennale’s opening, the OCAC wrote to the director confirming that the film could not be shown without cuts.
The OCAC cited the Film and Video Act, § 29, to justify their ban, though the paragraph in question states: “if the Film and Video Censorship Committee considers any film as having content which undermines or is contrary to public order or good morals, or may affect the security and dignity of Thailand, the Film and Video Censorship Committee shall have the power to order an applicant to edit or cut off the scene before granting approval”. In other words, the power of movie censorship rests with the Film and Video Censorship Committee (which did not view the film), rather than the OCAC.
After this legally questionable verdict, the film was excluded from the Biennale, and Chulayarnnon’s negotiations with the OCAC have since been moving at a snail’s pace. As he said in last week’s interview, he is defending freedom of expression and setting a precedent: “I use this film as a case study, to understand and question the system. I don’t fight for myself, but I fight for the next film, the next project in the future.” The Biennale runs until 28th February next year, though it remains to be seen whether Birth of Golden Snail will be aborted or not.
0 comment(s):
Post a Comment