22 December 2024

Oblivion:
The Original Texts


Oblivion

The short film Oblivion: The Original Texts (เลือน: บทประพันธ์ดั้งเดิม), a collage of found footage woven into a magical realist allegory, begins with the sound of gunshots, stills from the recent film Taklee Genesis (ตาคลี เจเนซิส), and a voiceover in which a student, Burindh, describes the 1976 massacre at Thammasat University: “A gunshot has been fired. Sending its vibrating wave upon my chest.”

As the poetic voiceover continues, the narrator recalls how he fled not only from the Thammasat campus but from Bangkok itself, which “is not the city of the people. It is not the city of ordinary people”. (These lines are juxtaposed with vintage newsreel footage of the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall and the Grand Palace, symbolic buildings that have also featured in some of the director’s previous short films.)

As he escapes from his attackers, Burindh asks: “if I don’t possess this ideology that’s different than them, would they still aim their bullets at me?” The question is as relevant now as it was in 1976, as riot police fired rubber bullets at student protesters in 2021 and 2022. The film uses footage of a protest against Ampon Tangnoppakul’s conviction for lèse-majesté, taken from the short film Ashes, to hint at the ideology of Burindh and the recent protesters.

Oblivion

In 1976, a prominent monk, Kittivuddho Bhikku, pronounced that killing Communists was equivalent to merely catching fish, in a signal to the royalist vigilante groups who stormed the Thammasat campus a few months later. Images of fish in the documentary The Terrorists (ผู้ก่อการร้าย) were metaphors for the monk’s comments, though Oblivion goes a stage further: Burindh transforms into a goby fish and swims away from Bangkok.

Burindh’s metamorphosis is similar to that of Boonsong, the monkey spirit in Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (ลุงบุญมีระลึกชาติ), another student who fled from persecution and transformed into an animal. Burindh meets Boonsong, his (literal) kindred spirit, who reassures him that his memories (and, by implication, Thailand’s political traumas) will not be forgotten as long as they are retold.

Oblivion is the latest of more than fifty films that refer to the Thammasat massacre. (The previous examples are discussed in Thai Cinema Uncensored.) It was directed under the pseudonym Burindh the Golden Goby, and it will be followed by Oblivion: The Non-human Interpretation, which will be shown next year as part of Bangkok Design Week.

21 December 2024

Save it with Our Eyes


Save it with Our Eyes Save it with Our Eyes

Twenty short films will be shown this evening at the Ready for the Weekend coffee shop in Khon Kaen, as part of the ‘save micro cinema’ campaign. The Save It with Our Eyes programme includes Vichart Somkaew’s The Letter from Silence (จดหมายจากความเงียบ) and Chaweng Chaiyawan’s Please... See Us (หว่างีมอละ).

The campaign began earlier this week, after Bangkok’s boutique Doc Club and Pub cinema announced that it could no longer screen films. On 20th June, Doc Club began showing Sarawut Intaraprom’s Pup (สุนัข และ เจ้านาย), which was rated ‘20’, and three staff from the Ministry of Culture were on site to ensure that audience IDs were being checked. They discovered that the venue had never applied for a cinema licence, and advised that it could continue to operate during the application process.

However, Doc Club’s licence application was ultimately rejected, as its location, the Woof Pack building, does not have sufficient access. (The cinema can only be reached via narrow staircases.) In a statement posted on social media on 16th December, Doc Club explained (perhaps naively) that they had not realised that a cinema licence was necessary, and that they were attempting to find a more suitable location.

The Letter from Silence was previously screened as part of The 28th Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 28) and the Short Film Marathon 28 (หนังสั้นมาราธอน 28). Please... See Us was shown at Maejo University in Chiang Mai earlier this year, at Chiang Mai University, and at a Chaweng retrospective in Phattalung. It had an outdoor screening in Chiang Mai last year. It has been screened twice at Doc Club, in 2021 and 2023. It was shown in Phayao as part of Wildtype 2021, and in Salaya at the 25th Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 25).

20 December 2024

Nosferatu:
A Symphony of Horror



Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (Eine Symphonie des Grauens), made more than a hundred years ago, is returning to the big screen at the House Samyan cinema in Bangkok. It will be shown there in January 2025.

F.W. Murnau’s classic film, an unauthorised adaptation of Dracula, is a masterpiece of horror and German Expressionism. It contains some of the most iconic images in silent cinema, especially the sequence in which the vampire, seen only as a shadow, glides up a staircase and extends his talons to clutch his victim’s heart.

Nosferatu was also shown in Bangkok earlier this year at GalileOasis, and in 2018 at Cinema Winehouse. It had a gala screening at the Scala cinema in 2016, as the opening film of the 3rd Silent Film Festival in Thailand (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์เงียบ ประเทศไทย ครั้งที่ 3).

17 December 2024

Unleashed



Boris Johnson’s memoir Unleashed is almost 800 pages long, though there are only a handful of genuinely interesting passages amid the self-congratulatory prose. The most curious of these is an anecdote implying that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu planted a bug in the UK Foreign Secretary’s private bathroom: Johnson writes that Netanyahu used the room during a visit to the Foreign Office, and that during a subsequent security sweep “they found a listening device in the thunderbox.”

Johnson is clearly aware of his reputation, characterising himself in his opponents’ eyes as “the monstruous Johnson, the beast of Brexit and the big bullshitting bus, the Pied Piper who played the devil’s tunes and led the people to perdition.” He later describes the Vote Leave campaign bus as “the great red bus of truth”, just one of numerous misleading and unretracted claims about the European Union. When he decided to campaign for Brexit, he says that David Cameron told him: “I will fuck you up forever.”

He acknowledges making “many goofs”, though he is unrepentant about his major failings. He refuses to accept the Supreme Court’s ruling that his prorogation of parliament was illegal, and nicknames Brenda Hale “Spiderwoman” after a brooch she wore while reading the judgement. He is also unapologetic about ‘partygate’, and in fact he now regrets the “rather pathetic apologies” he made at the time. Despite a Privileges Committee report accusing him of repeatedly lying to the House of Commons, he insists that he “hadn’t misled Parliament, certainly not intentionally,” and calls the committee members “my enemies.” This is a consistent theme, as he also blames his partygate fine on people “determined to bring me down.”


Anthony Seldon’s Johnson at Ten is a much more objective account of Johnson’s premiership (as is Tim Shipman’s new book Out), and Sebastian Payne’s The Fall of Boris Johnson is a detailed study of the final months of the Johnson government. The other recent memoirs by former UK prime ministers are A Journey by Tony Blair, My Life, Our Times by Gordon Brown, For the Record by David Cameron, and two less conventional examples: The Abuse of Power by Theresa May and Ten Years to Save the West by Liz Truss.

15 December 2024

“ABC News and George Stephanopoulos regret
statements regarding President Donald J. Trump...”


This Week

ABC News has agreed to pay Donald Trump $15 million in an out-of-court settlement, after he sued the organisation for defamation earlier this year. Trump filed a lawsuit against ABC News and one of its anchors, George Stephanopoulos, when Stephanopoulos asked Republican politician Nancy Mace on air why she had endorsed Trump as a presidential candidate despite Trump having been “found liable for rape.”

Stephanopoulos interviewed Mace on This Week, in a segment broadcast on 10th March. He began the interview with a reference to a civil prosecution in which Trump was found guilty of sexually abusing E. Jean Carroll: “You’ve endorsed Donald Trump for president. Donald Trump has been found liable for rape by a jury. Donald Trump has been found liable for defaming the victim of that rape. It’s been affirmed by a judge.”

Mace, who is herself a rape victim, stated that she found the premise of the interview “disgusting.” Stephanopoulos again asked her to justify her endorsement of Trump: “I’m asking a question about why you endorsed someone who’s been found liable for rape.” Mace accused Stephanopoulos of victim-shaming her, and Stephanopoulos attempted to clarify: “I’m questioning your political choices, because you’re supporting someone who’s been found liable for rape.”

Stephanopoulos then pressed Mace again to answer his initial question: “why are you supporting someone who’s been found liable for rape?” She replied that the question was offensive, to which Stephanopoulos responded: “You don’t find it offensive that Donald Trump has been found liable for rape?”

Trump’s libel claim hinged on the fact that he was convicted of sexually assaulting Carroll, rather than raping her. His lawsuit quoted Stephanopoulos on previous broadcasts referring to sexual assault, in an attempt to prove that Stephanopoulos was aware of the distinction and had used the word ‘rape’ in the combative Mace interview either recklessly or maliciously.

Trump also sued Carroll for the same reason, after she accused him of rape despite the sexual assault conviction. That lawsuit was dismissed, however, as the judge in the sexual assault case issued a written clarification: “that Ms. Carroll failed to prove that she was “raped” within the meaning of the New York Penal Law does not mean that she failed to prove that Mr. Trump “raped” her as many people commonly understand the word “rape.” Indeed... the jury found that Mr. Trump in fact did exactly that.”

The previous references by Stephanopoulos to sexual assault were all made before 19th July 2023, when the clarification was published. His comments in the Mace interview, however, were made afterwards, so it could reasonably be argued that he was using the term ‘rape’ “as many people commonly understand the word”, as per the judge’s clarification. Nevertheless, ABC settled the case yesterday and issued a cursory statement: “ABC News and George Stephanopoulos regret statements regarding President Donald J. Trump made during an interview by George Stephanopoulos with Rep. Nancy Mace”.

The 7th Bangkok Experimental Film Festival


The 7th Bangkok Experimental Film Festival

After a hiatus of thirteen years, the Bangkok Experimental Film Festival will return next month. The 7th Bangkok Experimental Film Festival (เทศกาลหนังทดลองกรุงเทพฯ ครั้งที่ 7) will take place next year, from 25th January to 2nd February, at the new One Bangkok cinema. This time, the festival will not only showcase films with experimental content, it will also feature experimental technology, with an immersive virtual reality experience. The festival’s theme this time around is Nowhere Somewhere (ไร้ที่ มีทาง).

The Bangkok Experimental Film Festival was founded by director Apichatpong Weerasethakul and curator Gridthiya Gaweewong in 1997, which was a pivotal year for Thai cinema. The Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น) also began in 1997 (and is still going strong). 1997 also marked the start of the Thai New Wave, when Nonzee Nimibutr’s debut film Dang Bireley’s and Young Gangsters [sic] (2499 อันธพาลครองเมือง) broke domestic box-office records and Pen-ek Ratanaruang’s debut Fun Bar Karaoke (ฝันบ้าคาราโอเกะ) premiered at the Berlinale. (Thai Cinema Uncensored describes the “confluence of events” that took place in 1997.)

The Bangkok Experimental Film Festival was last held in 2012, at Bangkok Art and Culture Centre. The previous event took place in 2008, at the Esplanade cinema.

11 December 2024

“une exploration inédite du cinéma thaïlandais...”
(‘a unique exploration of Thai cinema...’)


JSS

Thai Cinema Uncensored is reviewed in the new issue of the Journal of the Siam Society (pp. 149–152). In his review, written in French, Bruno Marchal describes the book as “une exploration inédite du cinéma thaïlandais... une ressource précieuse pour ceux qui cherchent à comprendre l’évolution et la diversité du cinéma thaïlandais à travers les époques” (‘a unique exploration of Thai cinema... a valuable resource for those seeking to understand the evolution and diversity of Thai cinema through the ages’).

JSS (vol. 112, no. 2) was published this month. Thai Cinema Uncensored has also been reviewed by the International Examiner and Bangkok Post newspapers, the journal Sojourn, the magazines Art Review and The Big Chilli, and the 101 World website.

PDF

10 December 2024

Bangkok Through Poster 2024
Thailand Postlitical Fiction


Thailand Postlitical Fiction Bangkok Through Poster 2024
Cursed Siam Lese-majeste

The fifth annual Bangkok Through Poster exhibition opened at Kinjai Contemporary in Bangkok yesterday. This year’s theme is Thailand Postlitical Fiction: poster designs for imaginary movies commenting on Thai politics. Sixty-seven posters were selected from works submitted by artists, students, and design studios, and many of the posters are accompanied by synopses for the fictitious films they illustrate.

All the Light We Can(not) See Animal Sanctuary More Conceal, More Reveal Unfortunately

A handful of posters in the exhibition refer to past political violence. One example is a spoof horror film titled Cursed Siam (สาปสยาม) by Canyouhearcloud, referencing the 6th October 1976 massacre at Thammasat University. Two posters refer to the 2010 crackdown at Ratchaprasong: All the Light We Can(not) See by Wonderwhale Studio (which uses candles to represent the red-shirt victims), and Animal Sanctuary by Chonlatorn Wongrussamee (which emphasises the killing of wounded protesters sheltering at Wat Pathum Wanaram). Two posters—More Conceal, More Reveal (ยิ่งปกปิด ยิ่งเปิดเผย) by Deepend Studio, and Unfortunately by Njorvks—highlight former prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva’s statement that “unfortunately, some people died” at Ratchaprasong. Kawinnate Konklong’s short film Unfortunately (แค่วันที่โชคร้าย), released last year, also refers to Abhisit’s dismissive comment.

The Missing The Chair of the Promise Land The Zone of Shinnawatra The Successor
Hereditary The Loop The Invisible Storm Closing the Scenes

Most of the posters, however, focus on more recent events. Thaksin Shinawatra and his daughter Paetongtarn (the current Prime Minister) are the most common theme, featuring on ten posters: The Missing (You Too Much) (ผมคิดถึงคุณ) by Setthawuth K. (a spoof of The Shining), The Chair of the Promise Land [sic] by Genji Kun, The Zone of Shinnawatra [sic] by Nam.Ni.Ang, The Successor by Gaw Chutima, Hereditary by Kritsaran Hanamonset, The Loop by Thalufah, The Invisible Storm by Antizeptic, The Landslider by Sina Wittayawiroj (a diptych inspired by The Lobster), and Closing the Scenes (ปิดฉาก) by Thiraphon Singlor.

The Landslider The Landslider

The student protest movement inspired almost as many posters as the Shinawatras, including Chorn Yuan’s A Smile. There are two that refer to 16th October 2020, when riot police used water cannon to disperse protesters at Siam Square: 16 10 63 by PrachathipaType, and Sky Flood, Stars Fall (น้ำท่วมฟ้า ปลากินดาว) by Tnop Design. Panita Siriwongwan-ngarm’s Here at Din Daeng Police Station, a Boy Named Varit Died (ที่นี่ (สน.ดินแดง) มีคน ตาย ชื่อ ด.ช.วาฤทธิ์) honours a 15-year-old boy who was shot at a protest in 2021.

A Smile 16 10 63 Sky Flood, Stars Fall Here at Din Daeng Police Station, a Boy Named Varit Died

Protest leader Arnon Nampa appears in two posters: The Lawyer Devil (ทนายปีศาจ) by Shake and Bake Studio, and The Letter (จดหมายรัก) by Tanis Werasakwong (known as Sa-ard). The Letter refers to letters he wrote to his family from prison, as does Vichart Somkaew’s short film The Letter from Silence (จดหมายจากความเงียบ), released this year. Arnon’s fellow protest leader Parit Chirawak features in The Penguin 112 by director Chaweng Chaiyawan (a reference to Parit’s nickname and the lèse-majesté charges he faces).

The Lawyer Devil The Letter The Penguin 112

Article 112 also inspired perhaps the strongest poster in the exhibition, Pssyppl’s Lèse-majesté, which depicts blue figures strangling red ones with nooses, a comment on the maliciousness and severity of lèse-majesté prosecutions. Bangkok Through Poster 2024 runs until 22nd December, and Neti Wichiansaen’s documentary Democracy after Death (ประชาธิปไตยหลังความตาย) will be shown on the final day of the exhibition. (The film was also screened in Chiang Mai last year and in 2022.)

Please... See Us


Please... See Us

Chaweng Chaiyawan’s Please... See Us (หว่างีมอละ) will be screened tomorrow at Maejo University in Chiang Mai as part of a double bill of Chaweng’s short films. Please... See Us is a powerful and transgressive film, and ends with an extended sequence in which a pig is killed and dismembered, the helpless animal being a tragic metaphor for the plight of ethnic minorities in Thailand.

The film was shown at Chiang Mai University ealier this year, and at a Chaweng retrospective in Phattalung. It had an outdoor screening in Chiang Mai last year. It has been screened twice at Doc Club and Pub in Bangkok, in 2021 and 2023. It was shown in Phayao as part of Wildtype 2021, and in Salaya at the 25th Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 25).

09 December 2024

Sarit Thanarat



Sarit Thanarat, military prime minister during the Cold War, died in December 1963. After his death, the floodgates opened, and exposés of his love life were rushed into print. His lovenest was a private residence nicknamed the ‘pink palace’ (วิมานสีชมพู), and this was the title of a Sarit biography published in 1964, which included a dossier of photographs of Sarit’s alleged lovers. Several erotic novels of the period, including แม่ม่ายผ้าขะม้าแดง (‘red-headed widow’), were also thinly-veiled portrayals of Sarit’s mistresses.

Almost fifty years later, the phrase ‘pink palace’ was censored by Channel 3 when it broadcast the lakorn คุณชายพุฒิภัทร (‘khun Chai Puttipat’) on 5th May 2013. In the third episode, a former military general played by Montree Jenuksorn (who slightly resembles Sarit) discussed his ‘pink palace’, though the sound was muted, presumably to avoid any possibility of a libel suit from Sarit’s descendents. (The novel on which the drama was based refers to Sarit more obliquely.)

Potential defamation also prevented director Banjong Kosallawat from making a planned Sarit biopic in 2002, which was to have been titled จอมพล (‘marshal’). Sarit did feature briefly in the horror movie Zee Oui (ซี-อุย), ordering the swift execution of the murderous title character for political expediency. And Sarit’s statue looms ominously over the characters in Song of the City, Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s segment of the portmanteau film Ten Years Thailand.

After Sarit led a coup in 1957, he was portrayed as a hero by pliant newspaper cartoonists. One example of such propaganda showed Sarit cradling a rescued child in his arms, returning the boy (who represents the Thai people) to his grateful mother. In contrast, a July 1958 cartoon in the liberal ประชาชน (‘people’) newspaper depicted Sarit as a monkey wrapping his tail possessively around Democracy Monument. Sixty years later, in the wake of the 2014 coup, Sarit satire was too sensitive, and the Guerrilla Boys self-censored their mural Junta Connection (วิ่งผลัดเผด็จการ), which originally depicted Sarit passing his (literal) baton of dictatorship to Prayut Chan-o-cha.

Art and Culture (ศิลปวัฒนธรรม) magazine analysed cartoonists’ caricatures of Sarit (vol. 43, no. 1), and the journal Same Sky (ฟ้าเดียวกัน) examined the lurid books published shortly after his death (vol. 20, no. 2). Thai Cinema Uncensored discusses the portrayal of Sarit in Thai films.

07 December 2024

Dateline Bangkok


20 years anniversary

2025 is just around the corner, and it marks Dateline Bangkok’s twentieth year online. It’s hard to imagine, but back when this blog began back in 2005, Thaksin Shinawatra was prime minister (whatever happened to him...?), Siam Paragon and Suvarnabhumi airport weren’t open yet, and Moo Deng hadn’t been born.

The past two decades have been a period of political polarisation, with coups in 2006 and 2014, and violent crackdowns on protesters in 2010. Perhaps the most jaw-dropping political moment in recent memory came in 2019, when a Thaksin proxy party attempted to nominate Princess Ubolratana as prime minister. Sadly, the cycle of street protests, judicial overreach, and military intervention is likely to continue.

On the other hand, I have fond memories of many film events, including a marathon 24-hour programme of short films over a single weekend in 2018, various clandestine screenings of controversial films, and the World Class Cinema (ทึ่ง! หนังโลก) seasons at the much-missed Scala cinema. And did I really fly to Singapore in 2019 just to see one twenty-minute Thai film?!

There have been plenty of cultural highlights over the last twenty years. My joint favourites are Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (ลุงบุญมีระลึกชาติ), which won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 2010, and Rap Against Dictatorship’s anthemic single My Country Has (ประเทศกูมี), which was released in 2018 and instantly went viral online.

On a personal note, Thai Cinema Uncensored, published in 2020, told the full story of Thai film censorship for the first time. Dateline Bangkok’s archive now contains thousands of articles about films, books, art, media, music, censorship, and politics. The average number of readers is around 1,000 per day, and if you’re reading this, you’re one of them, so thank you very much!

somethingELSE
Back to the Future


Back to the Future
The Physical Realm

Sompot Chidgasornpongse’s short drama The Physical Realm (ภูมิกายา) will be shown at Doc Club and Pub in Bangkok tomorrow, in the second of a series of screenings organised by ELSE. The theme of the somethingELSE programme is Back to the Future.

The Physical Realm had its Thai premiere almost exactly a year ago, at The 27th Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 27). It was also shown in Chiang Rai earlier this year at the Thailand Biennale. It will be screened at the Thai Film Archive in Salaya on 22nd December in a reprise of the Best of Short 27 (โปรแกรมผลงานชนะรางวัลจากเทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 27) programme.

06 December 2024

28th Thai Short Film and Video Festival


Thai Short Film and Video Festival

The Short Film Marathon (หนังสั้นมาราธอน) concluded two days ago, and The 28th Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 28) will take place from 14th to 22nd December at the Thai Film Archive in Salaya. This annual festival, founded in 1997, is Thailand’s longest-running film event, providing a unique showcase for independent filmmakers.

Of the short films in competition, the highlights include Komtouch Napattaloong’s No Exorcism Film, screening on 14th December, and Jarut Wisawong’s Twas Partly Love, and Partly Fear on 21st December. Both films were previously shown at Wildtype 2024.

Twas Partly Love, and Partly Fear
No Exorcism Film
The Letter from Silence
Damnatio Memoriae

The documentary film competition includes Vichart Somkaew’s The Letter from Silence (จดหมายจากความเงียบ) on 14th December. The documentary strand also features two feature-length films showing in competition that were not part of the online Marathon, as they are politically sensitive: Uruphong Raksasad’s Paradox Democracy on 14th December, and Thunska Pansittivorakul’s Damnatio Memoriae (ไม่พึงปรารถนา) on 15th December.

Damnatio Memoriae premiered at the DMZ International Documentary Film Festival in South Korea earlier this year. The director has trimmed the film’s frontal nudity for this Thai screening.

You Fucked with the Wrong Generation Songs of Angry People Paradox Democracy

Paradox Democracy documents the recent student protest movement, and features clips from rally speeches by Arnon Nampa and other protest leaders, intercut with extracts from The Revolutionist (คือผู้อภิวัฒน์), a play about Pridi Banomyong staged by the Crescent Moon theatre group in 2020. The film’s working title was Paradox October, and it includes footage shot at the 6th October 1976 commemorative exhibition at Thammasat University in 2020.

Paradox Democracy’s release title has echoes of Pen-ek Ratanaruang’s Paradoxocracy (ประชาธิป'ไทย). It’s the third in a series of documentaries by Uruphong about the student protests. The first two films in the trilogy are You Fucked with the Wrong Generation (made for television, but not broadcast) and Songs of Angry People.

Sompot Chidgasornpongse’s short drama The Physical Realm (ภูมิกายา), one of the award winners from last year’s Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้นครั้งที่ 27), will be shown on 22nd December in a reprise of the Best of Short 27 (โปรแกรมผลงานชนะรางวัลจากเทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 27) programme. It will also be shown at Doc Club and Pub in Bangkok tomorrow.