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LIFE

Asean Film Festival is finally here

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 28/03/2024

» Despite the odd, unexplained double postponement -- the first when it was moved from early December 2023 to late January 2024, and then from January to March -- the Bangkok Asean Film Festival finally gets under way, from today until Sunday at SF CentralWorld. Despite the adjournment, the line-up looks decent, with the best Southeast Asian titles culled from the past year -- Tiger Stripes, Inside The Yellow Cocoon Shell, Abang Adik, Dreaming And Dying, Oasis Of Now, Nowhere Near, Morrison, Thai classics The Adventure Of Sudsakorn and The Adulterer, and a short film competition.

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LIFE

Poor Barbie... Oppenheimer's the bomb

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 08/03/2024

» The annual guessing game to read the minds of inscrutable Oscars voters is here.

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LIFE

Asian talents score big at Cannes

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 31/05/2023

» From Japan to Malaysia by way of Vietnam, Asian filmmakers of disparate sensibilities triumphed at the recently-wrapped 76th Cannes Film Festival. The Palme d'Or may have gone to French filmmaker Justine Triet from her tense drama Anatomy Of A Fall, but six other awards handed out by the world's most influential film festival went to filmmakers from Asia, an unprecedented slate of recognition.

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LIFE

Hear her roar

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 26/05/2023

» The image of a girl taking off her hijab is wrought with cinematic symbolism. Kamila Andini shows it in her Indonesian film Yuni (2021); Hesome Chemamah in his Thai short I'm Not Your F*cking Stereotype (2019); Ana Lily Amirpour in the Iranian vampire film A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night (2014). Subversion? Provocation? Liberation? At this year's Cannes Film Festival, we see that image in Amanda Nell Eu's Tiger Stripes, a work as playful as it is potent in its portrayal of adolescence and what it entails for a young woman's body.

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LIFE

Gay cowboys and glorious flesh

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 19/05/2023

» After the lukewarm opening film -- Maiwenn's Jeanne Du Barry, a fluffy costume drama starring Johnny Depp as King Louis XV -- the 76th Cannes Film Festival had its hottest ticket in a short film. Not just any short though: it's Pedro Almodovar's queer cowboy movie Strange Way Of Life, which saw patient festival-goers queuing up in the Rivera drizzle for nearly an hour to fill up even the worst seat of Salle Debussy on Wednesday.

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LIFE

10 films to watch out for

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 16/05/2023

» A fierce hijab girl, a Vietnamese pilgrimage, a Scorsese-DiCaprio team up and a new Cate Blanchett drama, Cannes Film Festival opens today with an eclectic taste of world cinema.

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LIFE

Of zombies and fairy tales

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 20/05/2022

» The opening films across the three programmes at the 75th Cannes Film Festival speak of disparate destinies of contemporary cinema, from the poetic to the political and the pointless. Let's start with the latter.

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LIFE

In Cannes, it's cinema as usual

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 17/05/2022

» After the cancellation in 2020 and a bump to the month of July in 2021 -- with smaller attendance as international travel was still interrupted -- the Cannes Film Festival returns to its usual mid-May slot, keyed up and fully prepped to show the world that it's cinema, and the cinema business, as usual.

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LIFE

The way I see it...

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 25/03/2022

» Ahead of the Academy Awards on Monday, our film critic shares his thoughts on the big runners.

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LIFE

It's alive!

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 21/12/2021

» Doomsayers will have to hold out a little longer. Cinema -- as in people sitting in the dark taking in a communal experience of audiovisual sensations -- is still breathing, moving, enlightening.