Visar inlägg med etikett Trip to Thailand 2012. Visa alla inlägg
Visar inlägg med etikett Trip to Thailand 2012. Visa alla inlägg

måndag 30 april 2012

My meeting with the Metanee's: The Gentlemen Concert 2012

Aey taking on the stage! Bravo!

Not much to say really, but this was another highlight from our Thailand-trip. This wouldn't have happen if it wasn't for my good friend and spiritual brother Satawat Metanee, singer, actor and teacher - and also son of Sombat Metanee. Satawat, or Aey as he's called, mentioned to me that he would participate in a concert, Gentlemen Concert: Man and Love at the Pridi Bhanomyong Institute, and that his father would perform also! So without any other thoughts I booked our trip so we could see the concert!

This was kinda the best bonus I could get! I'm there to meet Aey, but if he could introduce me to his father that would be fantastic! The concert was great by the way, and a perfect ending of a very long and sweaty day (me and Tong visited Sompote Sands earlier that day!). A classy, funny (even for us not knowing the language) concert and it was extra fun that so many came to us afterwards and started talking. We felt very welcome! I'm sure I will end up on every of these concerts if I one day move to Thailand.

There was several very good singers, Aey of course - and some gentlemen I just can't remember the names of! I have the program somewhere, but I can't find it right now. Sombat still had a strong and powerful voice and it's amazing to see him perform! When I got the opportunity afterwards to meet him my first thought was the he was a big teddy bear, very soft and friendly. Just like his son :)

Sorry for the blurry photos, but it was dark in there and afterwards it was so much emotions, so exciting that it was hard taking really steady photos!


The whole gang!



Father, son and daughter Metanee!


The Gentlemen!



Me, Aey and X!

Sombat Metanee and me!




tisdag 10 april 2012

My meeting with Pawana Chanajit

They have dinosaurs in Thailand!
After eating noodles with Yodchai Meksuwan me and my pal first decided to stop by some cool dinosaurs standing by the road, hardcore-monster fans you know, and then meet up with ”The Pearl of Asia” Pawana Chanajit at a restaurant nearby. Pawana had a short career in Hong Kong, mostly starring against David Leung, but did around 200 movies in Thailand until she decided to quit the showbiz and be a business woman. Nowadays she deals with selling and buying land and seem to live a good life doing what she want to do.

She was a bit late, but on the other side, we was a bit early, and we sat for a while at hour table waiting and talking movies until she arrived and looked like the superstar she still is. A very warm and friendly woman who gladly talked about her career (in English, very good English). She started her career when she was 11-12 years and a neighbor woman told her they needed a young actress for a movie shooting nearby. Pawana ended up with quite a big part and got stuck in the business for many years.

For me it was extra fun because she starred together with Yodchai in Sompote Sands cult classic Hanuman vs the 7 Ultramans, and I got her signature on the poster together with the autograph of Yodchai and Sompote.
Tong getting a poster signed by Pawana!

Pawana had a busy day and after some excellent food (I was very full after this day, I can tell ya!) she said goodbye and we decided to keep contact. Next time I wish I’ll have more time to sit down and talk more about her career and her life. But it was she who told me that the sometimes they shot movies so fast that they just went home to her, shot a scene outside her house and the continue to the next adventure!

Pawana and me :)

tisdag 27 mars 2012

A meeting with Yodchai Meksuwan

During my trip to Thailand I had the pleasure to meet a lot interesting people inside the business and those that left the movies a long time ago. One of the highlights was to meet Yodchai Meksuwan, one of the most popular leading mean during the late sixties and seventies. After the death of Mitr Chaibancha,  Yodchai (which literary means “Superman”) was hailed as the new star of cinema. Good-looking and with excellent physique he handled this part without any problems, but the former shoe salesman had other plans – to be an artist. Since his youth he had been a skilled carpenter, painter and sculptor and during the eighties she slowly stopped taking big parts and focused on his dreams of being an artist instead. He’s still acting, but mostly in TV and in supporting parts – instead he spends most of his money on building a huge museum.
Tong shows Yodchai some vintage magazines with him.
We, me and Tong, took a taxi to his museum and a tall man with a protective hat stepped out in the sun to greet us. He’s bald, but not because of age – he’s playing a monk in a TV-series and keeps his head shaved all the time. I recognized him already in the shadows and he later asked me if he looks the same – “Yes you do, just with more experience” I answered. A few moments later one in his staff comes with two chilled coconuts and I give him my DVD release of The Killer Elephants – he plays the second lead, together with Sombat Metanee. This is the first time he’s will get the chance to see the international version of the movie and when I’m mentioning that I’m trying to locate a lot of lost Thai movies that was released in Sweden he’s extra interested.
The museum is still under construction, but one fantastic statue in bronze is in place, rich of details and almost unreal in the perfection. I also get a chance to take a quick look into the Buddhist temple, I guess, that’s connected to the museum – everything build and created by Yodchai. So far he has spent 80 million bath on the museum and next year it will open to the public. I’ll be there.
The impressive museum.

The front has a statue created by Yodchai.

Another piece of art.

Very impressive wax statue!
“Are you hungry?” – and of course we are, we’re not gonna skip the chance to eat together with Yodchai and we follow his Mercedes to a simple street restaurant down the road – where we eat the most delicious noodles I’ve tasted in a long time. Yodchai has made 200 movies so far, but it’s easy to see where his passion is: in art, and it wouldn’t surprise me if he in the future will be more known as the artist Yodchai and not the actor.
Yodchai with the magazines again.

He invited us to a very good restaurant nearby.

After the dinner we say good bye and decides that we will keep contact, because maybe some of his lost movies can be found in my collection… and it will be a pleasure to dig up movies that he can add to his collection. Or not only a pleasure, an honor!
Me and Yodchai!

tisdag 20 mars 2012

A meeting with Sompote Sands

Say his name, and the mention of Sompote Sands makes fans both react with enthusiasm and anger. A controversial man since his days in Japan and he still creates controversy until this day. My first meeting with Sompote was Crocodile, the Dick Randall re-edited and dubbed version that was released in most part of the world – but the original Thai version, Jorrakay, is a superior creature feature and also is one of Sompote’s most even and commercially successful films.
Later I bought was very entertained by Yuk Wat Jang Pob Jumbo A, Hanuman VS 5 Masked Riders, The Noble War, Hanuman VS 7 Ultraman, Phra Rot-Meri, Tah Tien and the legendary Magic Lizard! The work of Sompote is like Toho on LSD, but in a very good way. We’re talking about full-blown craziness, packed with action, monsters and weird comedy. Even of the budgets was quite low, probably between 100000-200000 dollars (the budget for Tah Tien was 120000 dollars and Sir Run Run Shaw bought the Hong Kong rights for the exact same amount).
Sompote first came to Japan in the beginning of the sixties and got Akira Kurosawa as his mentor. He spent a lot of time inside Toho and learned the craft from the masters. When he later wanted to start his own film production in Thailand he worked with the Japanese and Eiji Tsuburaya became a close friend and inspiration. From the early nineties to the late eighties Sompote made moves featuring both local mythological monsters and Japanese characters like Ultraman and Kamen Rider. Sometime here the story about rights and licenses depart depending on which one you talk about, but I leave that to the lawyers. What I know is that I got a chance to meet Sompote Sands and visit his movie studio outside Ayuttaya, Chaiyo Studios – and very few other “farangs” have gotten that opportunity over the years.
I’m afraid I can’t show you so much from the inside of the studio – and a lot of it was destroyed by the recently floods in Thailand – but here’s the front and a couple of photos from the first studio. It’s not much left of it, but it’s still a fantastic place and a piece of movie history.

I met Mr Sands together with his daughter, Fon, and his secretary and together with walked through the inner sanctum of Chaiyo Productions - and boy, I wish I could show you the sights from there. But I can’t. Sorry. Not right now.
Instead I got a few hours of talk with Mr Sands and his knowledge about especially Japanese cinema is impressive. In his belongings is the camera that shot The Seven Samurais and King Kong vs Godzilla (he had a lot of very impressive behind the scenes photos from these movies also) and the love for cinema shines like I never seen it before. Forget all the rumors and talks, Sompote might be a clever businessman – but his love for cinema is so much bigger. What I especially liked about him is his geeky approach to monsters and supermen – he loves them, he cares about them. It’s like watching a twelve year old fan boy when he starts talking about the characters, showing photos and props.
Magic Lizard is one of his most talked-about movies, mostly because it totally lacks a coherent storyline and has a story so wacky that it’s hard to understand how it even came to be a real movie. Well, I asked him and Mr Sompote laughed a lot! Originally Magic Lizard was a TV-movie, a production ordered from a Japanese TV-station – and not intended for cinema in Thailand. “The Japanese has a very odd sense of humor”, Sompote said and laughed even more – joined in my the rest of the staff present. Yes, so even the man himself thinks Magic Lizard is a strange, wacky and odd movie. But there’s the answer, and it says it all: Japanese TV-movie. Nothing like that in the world.

I got a chance to meet Sompote the week, but this visit will still be one of the best memories ever from my geeky movie nerd life. I’m very happy that it happen and I hope and wish that Sompote’s new big plans will come into fruition!

onsdag 29 februari 2012

Trip to Thailand

In a couple of days I will travel to Thailand, with Bangkok as base, and enjoy my favorite country. My plan is to meet up with some talented and interesting people, actors and filmmakers and some journalists, and of course do a lot of movie shopping.

There will be some really cool people who I'm finally gonna meet, a couple of them connected to what I'm writing about on this blog. I will publish photos and reports from my travels during next month, so welcome back and have a great time!

Sincerely,
Fred