The Love of Siam

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The Love of Siam

The Thai theatrical poster.
Directed by Chookiat Sakveerakul
Produced by Prachya Pinkaew
Sukanya Vongsthapat
Written by Chookiat Sakveerakul
Starring Witwisit Hiranyawongkul
Mario Maurer
Chermarn Boonyasak
Sinjai Plengpanich
Songsit Rungnopakunsri
Cinematography Chitti Urnorakankij
Distributed by Sahamongkol Film International
Release date(s) November 22, 2007
Running time 150 min.
Country Thailand
Language Thai
Budget 17 million baht[1]
Official website
IMDb profile

The Love of Siam (Thai: รักแห่งสยาม, or Rak Hang Siam; RTGS: Rak haeng Sayam) is a 2007 Thai romantic-drama film, written and directed by Chookiat Sakveerakul. A multi-layered family drama, a controversial element of the story is a gay romance between two teenage boys.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Mew and Tong were neighbors and close friends in childhood. But after Tong's sister, Tang, disappeared, Tong's family moved away. The boys are reunited during their senior year of high school at Siam Square. The musically talented Mew is the leader of a boy band called August. Tong has a pretty girlfriend, Donut. The meeting stirs up old feelings that Mew has harbored since boyhood, his love for Tong.

Mew's band, meanwhile, has a new manager, June. She looks just like Tong's long-lost sister, Tang. After meeting June, Tong and his mother, Sunee, devise to a plan to pay June to pretend she is Tang, in hopes that it will pull Tong's father out of his alcoholic depression. Tang borrows a story from the Thai film Ruk Jung, saying she has amnesia, which is why she has forgotten how to say her family's Catholic grace at the dinner table.

Mew is also the object of an unrequited crush of a neighbor girl, Ying. But Mew has strong feelings for Tong, which have inspired him to write new songs.

The boys share a prolonged kiss in Tong's backyard one night after a party in honor of the return of Tang. Tong also spends the night with Mew, which causes his mother to worry.

At Christmas time, as Tong and his mother are decorating a Christmas tree, they have a heart-to-heart talk about making choices, and Tong asks his mother to let him make his own choices.

Tong then goes to Siam Square for a date with Donut. Mew's band is playing nearby, so Tong abandons Donut and tells her he cannot be with her. He then rushes to see Mew play and is guided there by Ying, who has accepted the fact that Mew loves Tong. After the performance, Tong gives Mew a gift, a missing nose from a wooden doll that Tong gave him when they were children. However, Tong tells Mew he can't be his boyfriend but that doesn't mean he doesn't love Mew.

[edit] Cast

from L-R :Aticha Pongsilpipat, Witwisit Hiranyawongkul, Chermarn Boonyasak, Sinjai Plengpanich and Mario Maurer
from L-R :Aticha Pongsilpipat, Witwisit Hiranyawongkul, Chermarn Boonyasak, Sinjai Plengpanich and Mario Maurer

[edit] Reception

[edit] Marketing controversy, audience response

From left to right - Mario Maurer, Kanya Rattanapetch, Witwisit Hiranyawongkul and Chookiat Sakveerakul
From left to right - Mario Maurer, Kanya Rattanapetch, Witwisit Hiranyawongkul and Chookiat Sakveerakul

Marketed as a typical teen romance between boys and girls, the gay aspect of the love story was controversial.

Thai-language webboards were posted with messages of support, as well as accusations by moviegoers that they were misled into watching "a gay movie."[1]

Director Chookiat Sakveerakul admitted the film was marketed on the film posters and in the film's previews as a straight romance because he wanted it to reach a wider audience.[1]

"The movie is not all about gay characters, we are not focusing on gay issues, we are not saying, 'let's come out of the closet, so obviously, we don't want the movie to have a 'gay' label," he said in an interview.[1]

But the director confirmed the mixed reaction of audiences. "I went incognito to a movie theater and observed the audience. I didn't expect such a strong reaction. Maybe I was just too optimistic that homophobia in Thai society had subsided."[1]

[edit] Box-office performance

The Love of Siam was released in Thai cinemas on November 22, 2007, opening on 146 screens. It was the No. 1 film at the Thai box office that weekend, topping the previous No. 1 film, Beowulf.[2] It slipped to No. 2 the following weekend, unseated by the comedy film, Ponglang Amazing Theater.[3] In the third week of release, it had dropped to No. 5, with to-date box office takings of US$1,198,637.[4]

[edit] Critical response

The Love of Siam was received with critical acclaim upon its release.

Bangkok Post film critic Kong Rithdee called the film "groundbreaking", in terms of being the first Thai film "to discuss teenagers' sexuality with frankness". He praised the mature, realistic family drama aspects of the film, as well as the solid performances, particularly by Sinjai Plengpanich as the mother Sunee.[5]

Another Bangkok Post commentator, Nattakorn Devakula, said the film contained important lessons for Thai society. "The point that the film attempts to teach viewers – and a largely conservative Thai society – is that love is an evolved form of emotional attachment that transcends sexual attraction of the physical form."[6]

A reviewer for The Nation called the film "brilliantly conceived".[7]

A few critics found fault with the film, among them Gregoire Glachant of BK magazine, who commented that "The Love of Siam isn't a very well shot movie. Chookiat's camera only records his dull play with equally dull angles and light as it wanders from homes to schools, to recording studio, and to Siam Square without sense of purpose or directions."[8]

[edit] Awards

at Star Entertainment Awards 2007
at Star Entertainment Awards 2007

The Love of Siam dominated Thailand's 2007 film awards season, winning the Best Picture category in all major national film award events, including the Thailand National Film Association Awards, Starpics Magazine's Starpics Awards, the Bangkok Critics Assembly Awards, Star Entertainment Awards, and Kom Chad Luek Newspaper's Kom Chad Luek Awards.[9] Awards won by the film include the following:

Starpics Awards
  • Best Picture
  • Best Director (Chookiat Sakveerakul)
  • Best Actor (Mario Maurer)
  • Best Actress (Sinjai Plengpanich)
  • Best Supporting Actor (Songsit Rungnopakunsri)
  • Best Screenplay (Chookiat Sakveerakul)
  • Best Cinematography (Chitti Urnorakankij)
  • Best Original Score (Kitti Kuremanee)
  • Popular Film.

Kom Chad Luek Awards

  • Best Picture
  • Best Actress (Sinjai Plengpanich)

Thailand National Film Association Awards

  • Best Picture
  • Best Director (Chookiat Sakveerakul)
  • Best Supporting Actress (Chermarn Boonyasak)
Bangkok Critics Assembly Awards
  • Best Picture
  • Best Director (Chookiat Sakveerakul)
  • Best Actress (Sinjai Plengpanich)
  • Best Supporting Actress (Chermarn Boonyasak)
  • Best Screenplay (Chookiat Sakveerakul)
  • Best Original Score (Kitti Kuremanee)

Star Entertainment Awards

  • Best Picture
  • Best Director (Chookiat Sakveerakul)
  • Best Actress (Sinjai Plengpanich)
  • Best Supporting Actress (Chermarn Boonyasak)
  • Best Screenplay (Chookiat Sakveerakul)
  • Best Original Song

The film was also nominated for Best Supporting Actor (Mario Maurer) and Best Composer (Kitti Kuremanee) categories in the Asian Film Awards at the Hong Kong International Film Festival, but did not win.[10]

[edit] Production

Chookiat Sakveerakul at the Thai press preview of The Love of Siam on November 21, 2007.
Chookiat Sakveerakul at the Thai press preview of The Love of Siam on November 21, 2007.

The film was first shot on December 26, 2006[11], taking advantage of the Christmas lights and decorations of Siam Square and the surrounding area.[12]

The Love of Siam is unusual among Thai films in many respects. First, at 150 minutes, the film is markedly longer than most other Thai films, and second it is a drama film, which is rare in the Thai industry, which mainly produces horror, comedy, action and (heterosexual) teen romance films.

Director Chookiat Sakveerakul said he felt the longer running time was needed to more fully develop all the characters and the story. He received full backing for this decision from producer Prachya Pinkaew and the production company, Sahamongkol Film International.

"They liked the first cut, which was even longer, so I didn't need to convince them that much. I feel that every minute of the movie is important, and I'm glad the audience will be able to see it in full," Chookiat said in an interview before the film's release.[13]

A nearly three-hour "director's cut" was released in January, 2008 exclusively at the House RCA cinema. It is booked for two sold-out shows a day through the end of February, 2008 with the possibility of an extended run.

The film was a departure for Chookiat, who had previously directed the horror film, Pisaj and the psychological thriller, 13 Beloved.

The gay romance was also unusual, in that it involved two "straight acting" boys. In most Thai films with gay characters, gay men are coarsely depicted as transgenders or transvestites with exaggerated effeminacy.

The young actors portraying Mew and Tong both had difficulties with the kissing scene.

Witwisit Hiranyawongkul, who portrays Mew, accepted the role because it was challenging and because he was interested in working with the director, who was a senior classmate at Montfort College in Chiang Mai.[1]

Mario Maurer, of Chinese-German descent, portrayed Tong, and was "nervous". "I've never kissed a man and kissing is not something you do every day," he said in an interview. "My father said it was just a job and not to think about it too much."[1]

[edit] Soundtrack

The Love of Siam Original Soundtrack
The Love of Siam Original Soundtrack cover
Soundtrack by various artists
Released November 12, 2007 (2007-11-12)
Genre Thai rock
Thai pop
Length 45:20
Label Sahamongkol Film International
Producer Chookiat Sakveerakul

An original soundtrack album was released on November 12, 2007, ahead of the film's release. The two-disc package features a CD with music tracks by Chookiat Sakveerakul, Witwisit Hiranyawongkul, the August band, Passakorn Wiroonsup and Flure, and a VCD. The album proved popular, and had sold out of many shops in the weeks after its release.[1]

Tagline: "Just ask yourself who you think of when you are listening to love song."

[edit] Track listing

[edit] Disc 1 (CD)

  1. "Gun lae gun" ("กันและกัน") – performed by Suweera Boonrod (Flure) – 4:34
  2. "Ticket (Day Trip)" – performed by Chookiat Sakveerakul & August Band – 3:34
  3. "Roo suek barng mhai" ("รู้สึกบ้างไหม") (Live) – performed by Witwisit Hiranyawongkul – 4:16
  4. "Pieng ter" ("เพียงเธอ") – performed by Witwisit Hiranyawongkul – 4:12
  5. "Gun lae gun" ("กันและกัน") (Acoustic version) – performed by Chookiat Sakveerakul – 6:20
  6. "Kuen aun pen niran" ("คืนอันเป็นนิรันดร์") – performed by Passakorn Wiroonsup – 3:07
  7. "Gun lae gun" ("กันและกัน") (Live) – performed by Witwisit Hiranyawongkul – 6:02
  8. "Roo suek barng mhai" ("รู้สึกบ้างไหม ") (Original Mix) – performed by Witwisit Hiranyawongkul – 5:00
  9. "Pieng ter" ("เพียงเธอ") (Demo) – performed by Chookiat Sakveerakul – 4:23
  10. "Ticket (Night Trip)" (Bonus Track) – Instrumental – 3:50

[edit] Disc 2 (VCD)

  1. The Love of Siam trailer
  2. "Gun lae gun" music video
  3. Introducing the August band
  4. "Gun lae gun" behind-the-scenes music video

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Saeng-Aroon, Vitaya. December 6, 2007. Love in a hot climate, The Nation (Thailand); retrieved 2007-12-13
  2. ^ Thailand Box Office November 22-25, 2007, Box Office Mojo; retrieved 2007-12-13
  3. ^ Thailand Box Office November 28-December 2, 2007, Box Office Mojo; retrieved 2007-12-13
  4. ^ Thailand Box Office December 6-9, 2007, Box Office Mojo; retrieved 2007-12-13
  5. ^ Rithdee, Kong. November 26, 2007. "Love, actually", Bangkok Post, Real Time, Page R5 (print edition, online articles are archived for subscribers only after seven days)
  6. ^ Devakula, Nattakorn. November 29, 2007. "It's the love of Siam - Rak Haeng Siam", Bangkok Post, section 1, Page 15 (print edition, online articles are archived for subscribers only after seven days)
  7. ^ Review: The Love of Siam, The Nation (Thailand); retrieved 2007-12-13
  8. ^ Glachant, Gregoire (2007). December 7,2007. The Love of Siam. BK magazine, Page 40 (print edition)
  9. ^ 2007 Thai film awards summary, Thaicinema.org, <http://www.thaicinema.org/news51_062rangwan.asp>. Retrieved on 17 February 2008 .
  10. ^ Nominations & winners asianfilmawards.org
  11. ^ Q&A The Love of Siam (Thai)
  12. ^ "The Love of Siam" A love defination of Madiew DaraDaily.co.th/; retrieved 2007-12-26
  13. ^ Rithdee, Kong. November 16, 2007. "Romancing the Square", Bangkok Post, Real Time, Page R1 (print edition; online version available only to subscribers after seven days).

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