Thursday, May 15, 2014

Bangkok Cinema Scene: Movies opening May 15-21, 2014

Godzilla


Purists – mainly in Japan – have been critical of the new Godzilla even before it was released. This new Godzilla is too fat, they say. Director Gareth Edwards, is just shrugging it off, saying Godzilla is "big-boned".

This is a reboot of the long-running kaiju franchise, about a giant, atomic-fire-breathing prehistoric lizard, awakened and mutated by mankind's meddling with nuclear technology.

Edwards, a British filmmaker, made his mark with the well-regarded moody sci-fi thriller Monsters, which was about large aliens walking the Earth – aliens you don't really see until the director is good and ready to show them to you.

Like Monsters, the focus is more on people, rather than giant critters. The setting delves into the monsters' origins, which were then covered up in Japan in the 1950s. Later, an earthquake caused an accident at a nuclear power plant in Japan. One young man, an American naval officer (Aaron Taylor-Johnson from Kick-Ass), believes there's been a conspiracy. Meanwhile, the guy's father (Bryan Cranston from Breaking Bad) has uncovered evidence that may lead to something big.

Elizabeth Olsen, Ken Watanabe, David Straithairn and Sally Hawkins also star.

Critical reception is mixed, but is certainly way more positive than Hollywood's lame 1998 first take on the revered Japanese franchise. Rated G



Also opening



Enemy – Jake Gyllenhaal is a sad man who takes no interest in anything in life. Even having a beautiful girlfriend (Mélanie Laurent) isn't enough to snap him out of his sorry state. But he perks up when he spots an actor in a movie who looks just like him. Based on a 2002 novel José Saramago, O Homem Duplicado (The Double), this thriller is directed by Denis Villeneuve, who previously worked with Gyllenhaal in Prisoners – a thriller that I found infuriatingly pretentious. Safe to say I'll be giving this a miss – the premise alone has me running very far away. But critics are generally positive, so perhaps you'll enjoy this more than I will. Rated 15+


Haunt – After moving into an old house with his family, a teenage boy begins experiencing paranormal activity. He enlists the help of a neighbor girl to investigate. They find a box that allows them to communicate with the dead. Harrison Gilbertson, Liana Liberato and Jacki Weaver star. This had a limited release in the States last year and was later offered as video-on-demand. However, critics don't really demand you see it. Rated 15+



Also showing



The Friese-Greene Club – I somehow got my wires crossed when looking at the schedule last week, and jumped the gun – The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie screens tonight, not last Thursday as I thought. I guess it was the idea of a young Maggie Smith that got me all excited. Tomorrow, the must-see-on-the-big-screen selection is Terrence Malick's painterly debut, Badlands, following Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek on a cross-country crime spree. On Saturday, the "troubled youth" movie is Suburbia, Penelope Spheeris' look at street punks. It was why she got hired to direct Wayne's World. And on Sunday, Audrey Hepburn is in a terrifying situation in Wait Until Dark – she's a blind woman terrorized by a home invader. And next Wednesday is National Lampoon's European Vacation – not the best of the Vacation movies, but still a "great American comedy". Shows start at 8. The FGC is down an alley next to the Queen's Park Imperial Hotel on Sukhumvit Soi 22. With just nine seats, the screening room fills up fast, so reservations are a must. There are sometimes additions and changes in the schedule, so please check the website and Facebook page for updates.


Learning Through Asean – Indonesian Movies – The second part of a double-bill program at the Thai Film Archive opens at 1 on Saturday with Postcards from the Zoo, a surreal comedy by Indonesian indie director Edwin. It's about an orphan girl (Ladya Cheryl) who grows up in a zoo, working various odd jobs. She then takes up a with an itinerant cowboy magician (Nicolas Saputra). It competed for the Golden Bear at the Berlin fest in 2012. That's followed at 3 with a selection of Edwin's short films and then a talk with the director and his producer Meiske Taurisa.


Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand – Films are back with a vengeance at the FCCT, which kicks off a double-bill of Monday night screenings next week. First up is La Petite Chambre, a 2011 Swiss drama about a bitter widower who fights being moved into a nursing home. So he's saddled with a caregiver, a young woman who is just as stubborn and bitter as he is. It was Switzerland's Oscar submission. Swiss Ambassador Christine Schraner Burgener is laying on wine, snacks and cheese. The show is at 7pm – not 8pm as they have been in the past. Admission is 150 baht for non-members plus 100 baht more if you want to eat or drink. The next screening is on May 26, with Michael Winterbottom's India-set romance Trishna, with support from the British Embassy.


Alliance Française – Tragedy strikes a young family in Australia when the father dies in L'Arbe (The Tree). One of the daughters, an 8-year-old-girl, believes her father's spirit lives in the gigantic fig tree that grows in their yard, and it is so big, it threatens to topple over and crush their house. Charlotte Gainsbourg stars and Julie Bertuccelli directs. It's in French with English subtitles at 7pm on Wednesday, May 21.



Take note

The European Union Film Festival runs from May 23 to June 5 at SF World Cinema at CentralWorld. I'll make a special posting about it in a day or so.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Bangkok Cinema Scene: Movies opening May 8-14, 2014

Village of Hope


Thai indie filmmaker Boonsong "Sueb" Nakphoo tells hardscrabble stories of contemporary rural life, enlisting his family members, friends and neighbors in his native rural Sukhothai Province to help him make his low-budget movies. It's a portrait of folks who have been surpassed by society, and they are out of step with the increasingly urbanized, digitized, plastic-coated modern Thailand.

Boonsong's latest feature is the ironically titled Village of Hope (วังพิกุล, Wangphikul), which is a sequel to his 2010 effort Poor People the Great.

In between those two films, Boonsong did the ambitious Four Stations, a 2012 compilation of four short stories by noted Thai authors. It won a jury prize at last year's Deauville Asian Film Festival.

With Village of Hope, which premiered at last year's Mumbai Film Festival, Boonsong further hones his craft, presenting the succinct tale in black and white. The story follows Sorn, a somber young soldier on leave who returns home. He feels ill-at-ease as he reaquaints himself to the village’s slow pace and the struggles of his impoverished relatives, who all live in a tight-knit collection of rustic wooden houses. Boyhood has slipped away and the reality of adulthood is looming for young Sorn.

Village of Hope screens at 6.30 nightly until Wednesday, May 14 at the Lido in Siam Square, with post-screening talks by the director and his crew.




By the River



It's a big week for Thai indie cinema, with two interesting films in limited release.

Along with Village of Hope, there's By the River (สายน้ำติดเชื้อ, Sai Nam Tid Shoer). Directed by Nontawat Numbenchapol, who follows up his Thai-Cambodian border doc Boundary, By the River looks at the hardships in a remote Karen village in Kanchanaburi where lead mining has contaminated the creek that used to be the community's lifeblood.

Concentrating mainly on the villagers, the film only briefly refers to the legal wrangling over the Klity Creek case, which stretched on for more than a decade. Though a verdict last year ordered a clean-up, it's going to be a massive effort, covering some 19 kilometers of waterway. It doesn't seem like the damage will ever be truly undone. Meanwhile, how will the villagers survive?

Nontawat recently returned to the village to stage a special outdoor screening for the residents.

Worth mentioning at this point is an effort to bring clean water to the village being undertaken by the Enlawthai Foundation.

By the River won a special mention at last year’s Locarno Film Festival and also screened at the 11th World Film Festival of Bangkok. It's been picked up by the new Thai indie outfit Mosquito Films Distribution and was part of the recent ChopShots festival in Jakarta.

Shows are scheduled to be at 4 and 8 daily (approximately) at SFW CentralWorld and SFX Maya Chiang Mai. Rated G.



Also opening



13 Sins – Eight years have gone by since there was word of a Hollywood remake of the 2006 Thai thriller 13 Beloved. The slick, tension-filled drama had a down-on-his luck salesman receiving a series of mysterious phone calls promising him increasing rewards for completing 13 increasingly sinister and dangerous tasks. Also called 13 Game Sayong and 13: Game of Death, the original film was directed by Chookiat Sakveerakul and was based on a comic by Eakasit Thairatana. Daniel Stamm (The Last Exorcism) directs this new version, which at one time bore the title Angry Little God. Mark Webber stars as the salesman, with Devon Graye, Tom Bower, Rutina Wesley, Pruit Taylor Vince and Ron Perlman. Critical reception is mixed, with a few surprisingly kind reviews. I wonder if they ever saw the original? Rated 18+


Bad Neighbours – Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne are a young couple with a new baby. They look forward to settling into adulthood in in their dream home in a quiet residential neighborhood, but their plans are disrupted when an unruly fraternity moves in next door. An escalating war between the neighbors looks to spiral out of control. Zac Efron also stars, playing the lead frat boy. Nick Stoller (Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Get Him to the Greek) directs. Critical reception for this raunchy comedy is actually pretty positive. Rated 18+


Oculus – After a young man is released from jail for the murder of his parents, he teams up with his sister to take down the real killer – a supernatural force unleashed through an antique mirror from their childhood home. Brenton Thwaites and Karen Gillan star. Critical reception is generally positive. This opened in sneak previews last week and now moves to a wide release. Rated 15+


Spirits War (ไพรดิบ, Prai Dib) – In this fantasy, spirit hunter Prai (Akara Amarttayakul) stops to rest in a forest near an abandoned mine and comes under attack. He is soon rescued by another spirit hunter, Paratee, but then she is taken prisoner by an evil priest. Pisut Praesangeam, who earlier this year did She Devil (รักเราเขย่าขวัญ, Rak Rao Khayao Khwan) and the 2008 comedy Super Hap, directs. Rated 15+



Also showing



The Friese-Greene Club – Maggie Smith won an Oscar for her portrayal of a radical girls' boarding-school teacher in 1969's The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, screening tonight. Tomorrow, open those pod-bay doors and check out the big-screen must-see spectacle of Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. On Saturday, it's Brian DePalma's Carrie, which is among this month's crop of "troubled youth" movies. It was originally scheduled to screen during an earlier "troubled youth" series at the club but was pulled due to a last-minute schedule change. Sunday's Audrey Hepburn showcase is 1953's Roman Holiday. And next Wednesday, perhaps have a pizza delivered to your seat while you are watching another classic American comedy – Fast Times at Ridgemont High. Shows start at 8. The FGC is down an alley next to the Queen's Park Imperial Hotel on Sukhumvit Soi 22. With just nine seats, the screening room fills up fast, so reservations are a must. There are sometimes additions and changes in the schedule, so please check the website and Facebook page for updates.


Learning through Asean – Indonesian movies – Films by celebrated Indonesian independent director Edwin will be screened this Saturday and next at the Thai Film Archive in Salaya, Nakhon Pathom. This Saturday at 3pm is his surreal comedy Blind Pig Who Wants to Fly, which comments on the serious issues surrounding race and Chinese ethnicity in Indonesia. Among the offbeat characters is a singing dentist who warbles Stevie Wonder's song "I Just Called to Say I Love You". From 2008, it competed in several film festivals, winning prizes in Nantes, Rotterdam, Singapore and the Golden Horse fest. Next Saturday, May 17, starting at 1pm, is the also-surreal Postcards from the Zoo, a comedy-drama about an orphan girl who grows up in a zoo, where she is raised by the giraffe keeper and works odd jobs to earn her keep. She then takes up with an itinerant cowboy magician. That's followed at 3pm with short films by Edwin and then a talk with the director and his producer Meiske Taurisia.


German Film Series – A young family copes with impending death when the father is diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor in the 2011 drama Stopped on Track (Halt auf freier Strecke). Andreas Dresen directs. Part of the Goethe-Institut's series of monthly screenings, it's showing at 1pm on Sunday at the Thai Film Archive in Salaya, Nakhon Pathom, and at 6pm on Tuesday, May 13, in the fifth-floor auditorium of the Bangkok Art and Culture Center. For further details, please contact the Goethe-Institut at (02) 108 8200.


Alliance Française – Winner of the Jury Prize at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival – a historic first for a film from Chad – Un homme qui crie (A Screaming Man) is the story of Adam, a former champion swimmer comfortably spending his declining years looking after a luxury hotel's pool. He's demoted to security guard when his own son is hired to take over as lifeguard. With the country in the midst of a civil war, Adam sees an opportunity to move the younger man out of the picture. Mahamat Saleh Haroun directs and Youssouf Djaoro and Diouc Koma star. The show is at 7pm on Wednesday, May 14 at the Alliance Française de Bangkok.



Take note


There's another new movie-listings website – Cinematic.asia. For now, it appears to only support showtimes for the big multiplex chains, Major Cineplex and SF.

The other startup movie-listings site Moveedoo collates data from the Apex cinemas in Siam Square and House on RCA as well as the mall cineplexes. So Moveedoo has the edge over Cinematic.

Both Moveedoo and Cinematic have arisen since the demise of MovieSeer, which went down the drain last year.

Indie filmmaker Thunska Pansittivorakul has released his taboo-breaking 2010 feature Reincarnate through his Tumblr site, but the actual platform is Vimeo. To watch, you'll have to "follow" Thunska on Vimeo, send him a message and then receive a password. Reincarnate will stream through Sunday, then on Monday, another of his features will be released online for one week only.

Mark your calendar for the European Union Film Festival, which runs from May 23 to June 5 at SF World Cinema at CentralWorld. Highlights include this year's Oscar-winning foreign film, The Great Beauty (La grande bellezza) from Italy. A free festival, this is always a very popular event with thrifty expats and balloon-chasing freeloaders, so be prepared to queue up for an hour or two to guarantee you'll get a decent seat.

And the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand has a "double bill" coming up, with Switzerland's La Petite Chambre (The Little Room) on May 19 and from the U.K., Michael Winterbottom's Trishna on May 26. Shows are now at 7pm, not 8 as they've been in the past.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Bangkok Cinema Scene: Movies opening May 1-7, 2014

The Amazing Spider-Man 2: Rise of Electro


Cineplex operators and movie distributors are clearing the decks for this week's release, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which is very nearly the only new movie making a bow.

This is the second entry in Sony's hastily rebooted Marvel superhero franchise, following the 2012 film. Andrew Garfield returns as the webslinging smart-alec Peter Parker, with Emma Stone as his love interest Gwen Stacey (Garfield and Stone are an item in real life). Also, Sally Field is back as Parker's sassy Aunt May.

Joining the cast this time around is Jamie Foxx as a nerdy electrical engineer for OsCorp who is obsessed with Spider-Man. Through an experiment gone wrong, he transforms himself into the terrifying new supervillain Electro.

Other baddies include the Green Goblin, the villainous alter-ego of Parker's longtime friend Harry Osbourne (Dane DeHaan). Paul Giamatti is a Russian gangster who becomes the hard-charging Rhino.

It's exhausting keeping track of all these Marvel Comics movies. As a film franchise, Spider-Man is licensed to Sony, which from 2002 to 2007 made a trilogy of films directed by Sam Raimi and starring Tobey Maguire. After the Raimi series ended with an overblown whimper – too many villains, not enough Spidey – Sony quickly turned around and rebooted the franchise with 500 Days of Summer director Marc Webb and The Social Network's Garfield in the lead.

Meanwhile, 20th Century Fox is pursuing its own Marvel properties, X-Men and Fantastic Four, with X-Men: Days of Future Past due next month and a reboot of Fantastic Four planned for next year.

Most of the rest of the Marvel properties are under the auspices of the Disney-owned Marvel Studios and its house of cards known as the Marvel Cinematic Universe. These include the interconnected Avengers, Iron Man, Captain America and Thor (plus TV's Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) as well as the upcoming Guardians of the Galaxy.

Critical reception is generally positive so far. It's in 3D (converted) in some cinemas, including IMAX. Rated G



Also opening



Ragini MMS 2 – Indo-Canadian pornographic actress Sunny Leone returns for this sequel to the 2011 found-footage horror about a failed director who rides a haunted viral video-text message to fame. Parvin Dabas, Kainaz Motivala and Divya Dutta also star. It's in Hindi with English and Thai subtitles at Major Cineplex Sukhumvit, Rama III and Pattaya. Opens Friday.



Sneak preview



Oculus – A young woman becomes convinced that an antique mirror is responsible for the death and misfortune her family has suffered. Karen Gillan (Doctor Who) stars. Critical reception is generally positive. This is in sneak previews, with screenings from around 8 nightly in most multiplexes. It moves to a wider release next week. Rated 15+



Also showing

Chalawan, a short film by Anuchit Ratanatrimongkol of King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang.

Bangkok International Student Film Festival – Now in its fifth year, the Bangkok International Student Film Festival began on Tuesday at the Bangkok Art and Culture Center, with screenings starting at 11am daily. Running until Sunday, there are hundreds of short films, with many competition programs filled with entries by Thai university students. There are also student films from the around the world in the International Competition, and the region's filmmaking talents are featured in the New Asean Filmmaker Spotlight. There is also an entire category for just animation. The screenings are taking place in both the fifth-floor auditorium and the fourth-floor conference room at the BACC. For the schedule and more details, check the festival website or Facebook page.


Alliance Française – Senegalese men in search of better lives take their chances on the high seas in La Pirougue, screening at 7pm on Wednesday, May 7 at the Alliance Française de Bangkok. It's at the intersection of Rama IV and Wireless roads, opposite Lumpini Park in the former location of the Suan Lum Night Bazaar.



Also opening


Having been busy with the just-wrapped Thailand International Destination Film Festival, Friese-Greene Club proprietor Paul Spurrier hadn't yet released a May schedule of screenings at his place. Keep an eye on the website or Facebook for details.

Taboo-breaking indie filmmaker Thunska Pansittivorakul will release two feature films on his Tumblr page, one May 5 and another a week later on May 12. Each will run for one week.