Sunday, July 22, 2007

Sang sattawat (Syndromes and a Century) (2006)

I'd decided to check this film out mainly because it was Thai. Helen and I had spent 9 months there and I knew that we would take something from it regardless of content. We were both quietly blown away by it. This is a meditative piece of cinema in the David Lynch mould of narrative bending. Apichatpong Weerasethakul tells a simple story based on his own life (his parents were doctors in a hospital) of a female doctor. The story begins in a rural hospital with an interview and then carries on delightfully with a funny exchange mostly off-screen as the credits roll. You realize the director is having fun when one of the characters says he is already bored with this film-making process. The other replies that this is only take 5, there is a long way to go. Characters often break into natural fits of laughter as they talk. There is a gentle understanding of people, and they are given room to breathe.

Like Lynch's Lost Highway, halfway through the story begins again. Same characters, only this time the setting has changed, and the perspective we are given also differs. Now we are in a modern urban hospital. As the classic Thai saying goes: "Same same but different."

The characters' discussion of Buddhism, reincarnation and previous lives now takes on heightened meaning. You try to remember what was said before, just as they try to remember who they were before. "I was not human in my previous life."

Symbolism plays a large part in the film. Water, mirrors. We are given lingering shots of The Buddha and modern statues and a droning soundscape grows as the camera fixes on long interior corridor shots.

This is a lush, funny, patient and poignant film that asks many questions. I will be seeking out his other works.

This is the trailer:


This is a sequence near the end of the film:

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