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Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul. “I want to talk about politics, our reality, our lives,” he says. Photo: AFP

Filmmaker fed up of Thai junta’s creative curbs to shoot in Colombia next

  • Apichatpong Weerasethakul, winner of Cannes festival’s Palme d’Or in 2010, decides to make next film, starring Tilda Swinton, in South America
  • Creative restrictions of junta-run Thailand to blame
Asian cinema

Wearied by the creative constrictions of junta-run Thailand, Palme d’Or-winning director Apichatpong Weerasethakul is making his next feature in Colombia with Tilda Swinton. Some things won’t change, though, such as his preoccupation with ghosts, memory and politics.

Apichatpong, a soft-spoken 48-year-old from rural Thailand, may not leap out as a household name. But he is the figurehead of Thailand’s cinema scene and a doyen of the global art-house circuit, vaunted for his non-linear storytelling, dreamy shooting style and strong – if often subtle – political messaging.

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With his home country under military rule since 2014, the filmmaker says he decided not to make the film in Thailand, where political discussion is stifled and he says films can be shut down on the whim of the generals.

To make a movie without addressing the urgent issue of the kingdom’s politics would be to undermine his role as a filmmaker, Apichatpong says.

Apichatpong Weerasethakul won the Palme d’Or at Cannes for Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives. Photo: AFP

“I want to talk about politics, our reality, our lives,” he said this week ahead of an awards event on November 19 in Nakhon Pathom, outside Bangkok.

Military rule has suffocated artistic expression in Thailand, but with elections slated for early next year a creative kickback is emerging, seen in everything from documentaries to rap and graffiti. Yet for film the road ahead is long, Apichatpong says. In his opinion “cinema will follow … real democracy and rights”.

Apichatpong was catapulted to recognition by Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, which won the 2010 Palme d’Or at Cannes. His elegiac films sweep through mysterious forests, mystical creatures, hallucinations and bruised national histories.

Apichatpong is worried about the creative restrictions of filming in Thailand. Photo: AFP

In December he is due to release a short film in the kingdom, his contribution to the anthology Ten Years Thailand, a bold project to document the country’s political and social travails.

But his next feature, Memoria, which is currently being scripted, will be filmed in Colombia – a country that shares some parallels with his politically fragmented homeland.

Set between 1970 and 1980, a period marked by the bitter fight between the left-wing Farc guerillas and radical paramilitary groups of the right, the film features Swinton playing an expat “adventurer” of sorts. She experiences auditory hallucinations and tries to “find the sources of these sounds happening to her only”, the Thai director explains.

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Research took in two months-long trips to Colombia and interviews with psychiatrists about drug use, he says, typical of his immersive approach to filmmaking.

Apichatpong had for years quietly been working on a script for his long-time friend Swinton. The pair eventually agreed to frame the story outside Thailand, where they were “both strangers … both foreigners”.

“The story is about discovery. She [Swinton] is very adventurous. She has different lives in the cinema world, she has more mainstream movies … but also experimental movies.”

A still from the short film Song of the City, directed by Apichatpong, in the omnibus feature Ten Years Thailand.

French actress Jeanne Balibar, who met the Thai director when they were jury members at Cannes in 2008, will also star in the film as an archaeologist.

The story draws on a motif that runs through all his films – ghosts. Apichatpong’s parents were doctors and he grew up in a hospital compound where “sickness, death and birth” left an indelible mark, while he was also preoccupied with sci-fi and the supernatural throughout childhood.

“There was nothing at that time except those magazines of sci-fi, ghost comics and ghost movies,” he says. “So to me they belong to the same place, a place out of the ordinary, anti-gravity, something that can appear at night and disappear in front of your eyes.”

A scene from Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.

There was logic in the leap to Colombia – firstly from a financing perspective for an international film, but also to satisfy his curiosity.

“I was very interested in Latin American culture, I was very interested in the Amazon. But when I was there I was more attracted to the people, to their memories,” he says. “They also really believe in ghosts.”

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