Mon, Jan 20, 2003 - Page 16 News List

Stars shine in Thailand

Celebrities and guests were given VIP treatment at the Bangkok International Film Festival, although the mood was dimmed somewhat by the fact that filmmakers in the actual competition failed to attend

By Yu Sen-Lun  /  STAFF REPORTER

Taiwanese actress Christy Chung appears at the opening ceremonies for the Bangkok International Film Festival's Golden Kinnaree award.

PHOTO: TAIPEI TIMES

The Bangkok International Film Festival opened a new chapter in its history on Friday with great pomp and circumstance as competition began for the first Golden Kinnaree award. A five-day gala is being held to celebrate the event's transformation into an international film festival -- one that aspires to become Asia's largest. Some 130 films are participating, 12 of which have been selected to compete for the Golden Kinnaree award, the festival's top honor. The lavish ceremonies with glittering traditional Thai dancers, the warm hospitality offered by the organizers and the Thai audience and the fancy leisure events for the guests all managed to cover flaws in the young event.

This year also marks a change in the festival's organizers. The previous four Bangkok Film Festivals had been organized by the independent newspaper The Nation. This year the Thai government's tourism authority has taken the helm with the goal of boosting both tourism and the Thai movie industry, transforming the festival into a big-budget event.

The 300 VIP guests are enjoying five-star hotel rooms and series of elaborate gala events replete with red-carpet entrances witnessed by attendees sipping wines and munching on Thai delicacies from the unlimited buffet. There was also a Bangkok Symphony Orchestra concert, a traditional Thai music show, a silk fashion show and a Thai boxing competition, as if the entire tourism industry in Thailand had been mobilized to contribute to the film festival.

The festival's ambition -- to become a showcase for world cinema -- is equally grand. "The goal of the festival is to present the cinematic landscape of major world films to Asia," said Patrick de Bokay, worldwide executive director of the festival. "We anticipate that the Golden Kinnaree Competition will become Asia's equivalent of the Cannes Palm d'or in Europe."

He further explained: "Busan is a festival to encourage new Asian talent. And Sundance is a festival to discover independent talent in North America. But I think Bangkok is different. It is a neutral land, a place where East meets West. And like Cannes, it's the place that gives the exoticness, which helps [attract] people from [all over] the world. That's why we wanted the Kinnaree award to recognize world cinema, [as opposed to a] specific target or audience."

The 12 films selected for the competition represent such an aim. They include The Quiet American, based on the novel by Graham Greene and starring Michael Caine and Brendan Fraiser. From Spain, there is the widely acclaimed Talk to Her by Pedro Almodovar. Also screening are the Cannes Jury Grand Prix winner from Finland, Man Without a Past by Aki Kaurismaki, Polish director Krzysztof Zanussi's Supplement and the Israeli film Kedma by Amos Gitari.

Representing Asia at the competition are Takeshi Kitano's Dolls from Japan, Small Voices from the Philippines and the Indian film A Tale of Naughty Girl.

Many of these films have been shown at other film festivals and some of them have already been released. One of the exceptions is the opening film for the Kinnaree competition, Frida, which made its Asian premiere in Bangkok. The film chronicles the bold and uncompromising life of the Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. Salma Hayek plays the controversial artist who took the art world by storm with her husband, painter Diego Rivera (played by Alfred Molina). Frida was directed by Julie Taymor and stars Antonio Banderas, Ashley Judd, Edward Norton and Geoffrey Rush.

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