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Tears of the Black Tiger (2000)
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Reviews Counted:16
Fresh:14
Rotten:2
Average Rating:7.3/10
Consensus: With a vibrant pastel color scheme and stylized action sequences, Tears of the Black Tiger is a bizarre, yet thoroughly entertaining Thai western.
Theatrical Release:Jan 12, 2007 Limited
Synopsis: TEARS OF THE BLACK TIGER takes a journey back to a lost past the heroic years of Thai genre cinema, when influences from Hollywood and everywhere else were subsumed into rollicking Thai... TEARS OF THE BLACK TIGER takes a journey back to a lost past the heroic years of Thai genre cinema, when influences from Hollywood and everywhere else were subsumed into rollicking Thai melodramas for an audience of avid fans. Sasanatieng's film is a brilliant pastiche of vanished themes, styles and characters, almost all of them easily recognizable as variants on the prototypes from other popular cinemas. But the film's project is not simply nostalgic. Sasanatieng uses the tricks and tropes of film style from the 1960's- iris shots, wipes, obvious back-projection but combines them with a startling, modernist approach to color and storytelling. The result is not only unique in Thai cinema but also an entirely new way of looking at genre entertainment. TEARS OF THE BLACK TIGER offers nostalgia as future shock. When Dum, a young peasant boy, falls in love with Rumpoey, the daughter of a wealthy family, they vow that, whatever happens, they will one day be together. When they meet again ten years later, their rekindled passion is thwarted by the murder of Dum's father by outlaws and by Rumpoey's betrothal to a smooth-talking police captain. Dum soon transforms himself into the gunslinging bandit, "Black Tiger," in order to infiltrate the gang who murdered his father. Fate will reunite the lovers one more time, but will they be able to continue their romance? Or will tragedy strike again? --© Magnolia Pictures [More]
Starring: Chartchai Ngamsan, Stella Malucchi, Suppakorn Kitsuwan, Arawat Ruangvuth
Starring: Chartchai Ngamsan, Stella Malucchi, Suppakorn Kitsuwan, Arawat Ruangvuth, Sombati Medhanee, Suwinit Panjamawat
Director: Wisit Sasanatieng
Director: Wisit Sasanatieng
Producer: Nonzee Nimibutr
Composer: Amornbhong Methakunavudh
Studio: Magnolia Pictures
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Reviews for Tears of the Black Tiger
Has lots of pop energy and an admirable poker-face when it comes to its Douglas Sirk-ian storyline. And even though it's essentially a Frankenstein's monster stitched together from a zillion other movies, you really haven't seen anything like it.
You've never seen and never will see anything quite like Tears of the Black Tiger.
A parody of and winking homage to the history of Thai melodrama, Wisit Sasanatieng's uproarious filmmaking debut exuberantly combines pop and kitsch with a wholesome belief in the thrills of bad art.
[Director] Sasanatieng engages the viewer's emotions fully in the squaring away of the eternal triangle, involving young people who emerge as three-dimensional individuals even though they are archetypal.
The result is something so old it's new, so corny it's funny. And while Tears of the Black Tiger is nothing more than entertaining, at least it's that.
It's watchable, but eventually wears you down with its over-the-top cleverness.
What makes Tears a must-see are its day-glo colors, stylized gunfights, music that sounds as if Ennio Morricone had written it for one of Leone's spaghetti Westerns, and hyperbolic dialogue.
Director Wisit Sasanatieng uses every trick imaginable to create surreal postmodern nostalgia. Has he wound up with pure camp, or a cult classic? As he clearly understands, the best B-movies are both.
The uncut Tears of the Black Tiger is more powerful than the cut version, not least for the way it shows that [director Wisit] Sasanatieng, even amid all the craziness, takes care to tie up even the loopiest plot details.
There may be crazier movies than this Thai cowboy melodrama of betrayal and forbidden love, but I can't think of one that is quite so mad about its own craziness.
Goodness knows there are enough winking genre references in Tears of the Black Tiger to fill an encyclopedia of film, but does anyone care, short of self-congratulating movie critics?
Nothing is too crazed, corny or freakishly florid for Tears of the Black Tiger. Together with cinematographer Nattawut Kittikhun, Sasanatieng dyed his images through digital postproduction, pushing colors to impossible hues of eccentric radiance.
Its no buried postmodern masterpiece, but it certainly is a jaw-dropper: a delirium-inducing crash course in international trash.
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