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Film Movement
2000s–present

Thai Slow Cinema

Southeast Asian Cinema

The cinema of Thailand dates back to the early days of filmmaking, when King Chulalongkorn's 1897 visit to Bern, Switzerland was recorded by François-Henri Lavancy-Clarke. The film was then brought to Bangkok, where it was exhibited. This sparked more interest in film by the Thai Royal Family and local businessmen, who brought in filmmaking equipment and started to exhibit foreign films. By the 1920s, a local film industry had started and in the 1930s, the Thai film industry had its first "golden age", with a number of studios producing films.

Source: Wikipedia
No. 22 · Thailand · Bangkok
The poet of duration and dissolution. His films move through time like ghosts through rooms — languid, associative, haunted by memory and mortality. Cinema as a space where the living and dead coexist, where a gesture or a glance carries the weight of entire lifetimes.