
Pen-ek Ratanaruang’s thriller 6ixtynin9 (เรื่องตลก 69) will be shown at Banban Nannan Library in Nan on 22nd March. In the film, a young woman loses her job and finds ฿1 million in a box outside her door. Like the similar setup in Danny Boyle’s Shallow Grave (a personal favourite), this unexpected windfall soon leads to unwanted visitors and bodies piling up.
Pen-ek discussed the film in an interview for Thai Cinema Uncensored, explaining how the police department — which dominated the film censorship board when 6ixtynin9 was released — made him add a postscript reassuring viewers that the police were effective at combatting crime: “we were asked by the police to put the rolling credit saying that she was caught and went to jail.” Their justification wasn’t the usual crime-doesn’t-pay moral lesson; instead, it was a face-saving measure by the police: “if the girl could do this, the police look bad.”
6ixtynin9 was previously shown at Bangkok Screening Room in 2017, and on the rooftop of the Metropolitan Waterworks Authority building in 2023. As part of a Pen-ek retrospective in 2018, it was screened on DVD at the Jam Factory and in 35mm at House RCA, and it was also shown at Alliance Française as part of another Pen-ek retrospective that year.
Pen-ek remade 6ixtynin9 as a Netflix series in 2023. In the TV version, the central plotline stuck closely to the film, though there was a new subplot involving a police drugs raid. The film was made, and set, in the aftermath of Thailand’s 1997 economic collapse (known here as the ‘tom yum goong crisis’), and the TV series was filmed shortly after the coronavirus pandemic, which caused similar economic damage. The show also had a political message, and news reports of pro-reform student protests were seen on TV sets throughout the series.
Pen-ek discussed the film in an interview for Thai Cinema Uncensored, explaining how the police department — which dominated the film censorship board when 6ixtynin9 was released — made him add a postscript reassuring viewers that the police were effective at combatting crime: “we were asked by the police to put the rolling credit saying that she was caught and went to jail.” Their justification wasn’t the usual crime-doesn’t-pay moral lesson; instead, it was a face-saving measure by the police: “if the girl could do this, the police look bad.”
6ixtynin9 was previously shown at Bangkok Screening Room in 2017, and on the rooftop of the Metropolitan Waterworks Authority building in 2023. As part of a Pen-ek retrospective in 2018, it was screened on DVD at the Jam Factory and in 35mm at House RCA, and it was also shown at Alliance Française as part of another Pen-ek retrospective that year.
Pen-ek remade 6ixtynin9 as a Netflix series in 2023. In the TV version, the central plotline stuck closely to the film, though there was a new subplot involving a police drugs raid. The film was made, and set, in the aftermath of Thailand’s 1997 economic collapse (known here as the ‘tom yum goong crisis’), and the TV series was filmed shortly after the coronavirus pandemic, which caused similar economic damage. The show also had a political message, and news reports of pro-reform student protests were seen on TV sets throughout the series.



















