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Tropical Malady (2005)
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Reviews Counted:41
Fresh:31
Rotten:10
Average Rating:7.1/10
Runtime: 1 hr 58 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Theatrical Release:Jun 29, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: At one point in TROPICAL MALADY, a woman tells the principle characters a traditional Thai story about ghosts and greed, and mentions the TV show WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE in the next breath.... At one point in TROPICAL MALADY, a woman tells the principle characters a traditional Thai story about ghosts and greed, and mentions the TV show WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE in the next breath. It's precisely that kind of disjunction that fuels this film from maverick director Apichatpong Weerasethakul (MYSTERIOUS OBJECT AT NOON), who divides his tale into two sharply-contrasted halves that suggest genre codes while defying them. Opening on a group of soldiers posing with a dead body, the film slowly makes its way to a country home where a family takes the troops in, and eventually settles on the episodic courtship between handsome soldier Keng (Banlop Lomnoi), and bashful country boy Tong (Sakda Kaewbuadee), both non-actors. Their relationship unfolds in ecstatic, tender vignettes that leave much to the audience's imagination, but the chaste touches and huge smiles the young men share are cut short when Tong disappears into darkness. When the lights come up again Keng--or, as he is referred to now, the Soldier--is a player in the retelling of an old Thai fable, while Tong is now a wild, shape-shifting ghost. The two trail one another through a jungle filled with unearthly sounds, and the line between the pursuer and the pursued disappears. Eventually the Soldier receives unlikely counsel and, following the advice he receives, allows himself to be consumed and devoured by his love. Mystifying and utterly elusive, Weerasethakul's film resists allegorical or conventional interpretation, with a pace and inner logic that will challenge the patience of some, but is sure to reward those willing to travel the distance to the end. [More]
Starring: Banlop Lomnoi, Sakda Kaewbuadee
Starring: Banlop Lomnoi, Sakda Kaewbuadee
Director: Apichatpong Weerasethakul
Director: Apichatpong Weerasethakul
Producer: Charles de Meaux
Studio: Strand Releasing
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Reviews for Tropical Malady
The leisurely storytelling may frustrate some viewers, yet this mysterious film succeeds in casting its own sensual spell.
Some fantasy films make the leap from reality to reverie relatively seamlessly, hopscotching between the two states without leaving the audience behind. Tropical Malady is not one of those.
While it's anything but commercial, it's also anything but unadventurous.
This new film is a mad puzzle, given as a gift from someone who recognizes his audience as thinking, feeling beings.
It's as if two completely different movies got spliced together in the editing room, or in the projection booth.
Director Apichatpong Weerasethakul's approach to gay love, Thai style, is dissatisfying.
The most beguilingly mysterious film you are likely to see this year, Tropical Malady delves into gay desire and Thai myth in utterly original, bizarre, and erotic way
There is no loss of art-movie face to be had, I assure you, in admitting difficulty with the filmmaker's intentional tangle of genres as he stakes his story between waking life and legend.
Maintains a visual richness, but loses its way with heavy-going forays into mythology and mysticism.
The real reward of Tropical Malady is the moviemaking itself. It’s slow, anecdotal, and told entirely from street level.
Weerasethakul’s confident composition of sight and sound induces a trance-like state with an elegant suggestion: that all-consuming love is for old souls.
Certainly for most audiences the viewing experience will prove not only tedious but bewildering.
This may be one of the most rapturously original, mysteriously beautiful love stories ever told -- Baboon-language skills optional.
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