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Search Result for “three months”

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LIFE

The world is on fire, but we still have the Oscars

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 13/03/2026

» Tight races in several categories as two outstanding American films, Sinners and One Battle After Another, vie for glory with other international titles.

OPINION

Living in Thailand's age of impunity

News, Kong Rithdee, Published on 17/01/2026

» There's no place like Thailand. Joyscrolling TikTok and Reels reveals dozens of clips made by international visitors lamenting having to leave our lovely country and return to dreary Europe or joyless America. "Nobody talks about how hard it is to go from this" -- insert a cut of a wonderful beach in Krabi -- "to this"--cut to a drab, damp suburban street somewhere in the West. Add a crying-face emoji. "I want to move here!" the traveller announces. True, everybody loves Thailand.

LIFE

Where the struggle begins

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 04/11/2025

» Annemarie Jacir's Palestine 36 reminds us that the question of Palestine didn't begin two years ago but generations before that. Showing at the Tokyo International Film Festival, the film is set in the aftermath of World War I as the European powers carve up the Middle East like a spoiled child slicing his birthday cake: gleefully, arbitrarily, jabbing their fingers on a map with no regard of history or the need of local inhabitants.

LIFE

Cinema of resistance wins at Cannes

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 27/05/2025

» In a year full of richly textured stories about female trauma and painful personal growth, the Cannes jury, led by Juliette Binoche, took the noble route and gave the Palme d'Or to the most political film in the 22-title competition.

LIFE

Cannes 2025: What's on our watch list

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 13/05/2025

» The 78th edition of Europe's biggest film festival starts today. We take a look at some notable titles across different sections -- Competition, Un Certain Regard, Directors' Fortnight and Critics' Week -- including a Thai film.

LIFE

Macondo encountered

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 31/12/2024

» Ideally, good books should be left alone, even if they sit enshrined in a cobweb after a thousand years of solitude. In the reality of today's content industrial complex, that is unacceptable. Every good book can be and must be adapted. To watch is to live, to binge is to breathe. Literature is not a paradigm of text but fodder for algorithm. So here it is, with an air of inevitability, the much-touted, long-awaited, rigidly respectful and adequately decent Netflix series One Hundred Years Of Solitude -- the first eight parts, with the remaining eight coming next year.

LIFE

2024 movie moments

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 17/12/2024

» The past year was surprisingly fantastic for Thai cinema, and a pretty good one for the rest of the world too.

LIFE

The magic of Méliès

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 21/11/2024

» Among the many museums in Paris, the Musée Méliès may slip through visitors' attention. That should not be the case.

LIFE

A Thai actor takes the stage at Cannes

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 22/05/2024

» In a dreary rural town in Taiwan, illegal Southeast Asian workers live a precarious existence toiling away in farms or homes while enduring tough bosses and prying authorities. Most of them are from the Philippines or Indonesia, but there are also a large number from Myanmar and Thailand.

LIFE

Cannes asks: Cinema anyone?

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 17/05/2024

» To remind us that we're here because of cinema, the 77th Cannes Film Festival did an uncanny double bill on its first day. The festival opened on Tuesday and will run until May 25. On the first afternoon, before the ritzy kerfuffle of the opening red carpet, Cannes screened the first part of the restored 1927 silent film Napoleon, an audacious epic of the French Revolution by Abel Gance, who 97 years ago tested the limits of what cinema could do with exhilarating results (the entire film runs for seven hours; we were treated to the first four here).