วันอาทิตย์ที่ 4 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2550

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Director List

- A -

- Adrian Lyne
- Akira Kurosawa
- Alfonso Cuaron
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Andrew Niccol
- Andy Tennant
- Andy Wachowski
- Ang Lee
- Apichatpong Weerasethakul

- B -

- Barry Sonnenfeld
- Baz Luhrmann
- Bernardo Bertolucci
- Brett Ratner

- C -

- Chatrichalerm Yukol

- D -

- David Lynch

Chatrichalerm Yukol



Date of Birth
29 November 1942, Thailand


Mini Biography

Yukoi, also known as Tan Mui, is paving the way for a whole new genre of film. His latest release, Suriyothai (2001), is Thailand's first big budget blockbuster film as well as one of its most highly anticipated. Breaking new ground in cinema has been a way of life for the son of 35 mm pioneers His Royal Highness Anusornmongkolkarn and MOM Ubon Yuko Na Ayudhya. Tan Mui has been involved in film since the time he was born, November 29, 1942. His parents were co-founders of the Lavo Pappayon Company that was apart of the family's daily life up until Tan Mui was sent to Australia for schooling. He next moved to the USA where he received a degree in geology from UCLA. His minor was in film studies, sharing the classroom with directors Francis Ford Coppola and Roman Polanski. He completed his work in the US by interning with the famous film producer, 'Merian Cooper'. When he returned to his native Thailand he began working for his father right away. Breaking away and trying to make it on his own, he took to writing and directing TV dramas like Ying Gor Mee Hua Jai (Women Have a Heart too), Hong Si Chompu (The Pink Room), and Mor Bhi (Ghost Speller). His feature film debut came when he headed the Mun Ma Kab Kwam Mued (It Comes with the Darkness) in 1972. His follow up, Chue Karn (His Name is Karn) earning him a nod for the award for Best Director in Thailand. His success continued as he released at least a film a year until 1979. Yet he continues to be one of the most important directors in Thailand while experiencing success on the international level as well, evidenced by the success of his film Kong (The Box) at film festivals around the world. He has spent the last few years tackling the most anticipated (as well as high pressured) film in Thai cinema history, Suriyothai. Yet with his background and his many talents, moviegoers everywhere are betting that Tan Mui will deliver.

IMDb Mini Biography By: goodtanin@yahoo.com


Trivia

Member of the jury at the Berlin International Film Festival in 1981.

Mentor to his young cousin SirLaosson Dara.



Where Are They Now
(July 2002) BKK, Making his recover film ''Last love''


Director:

- The Legend of Naresuan: Declaration in Independence (2007)
- Legend of King Naresuan: Hostage of Hongsawadi (2006)
- Suriyothai (2001)
- Daughter 2 (1997)
- Daughter (1996)
- Gunman II (1995)
- Song for Chao Phraya (1990)
- The Elephant Keeper (1987)
- Citizen II (1984)
- Gunman (1983)
- The Last Love (1975)


From : www.imdb.com

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 1 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2550

Brett Ratner



Date of Birth
28 March 1969, Miami Beach, Florida, USA


Height

5' 8" (1.73 m)


Mini Biography
Ratner grew up in Miami Beach, the only child of a famous Jewish socialite mother. He attended Miami Beach Senior High and was President of the Leo Club in 1986. He was also a member of the "fraternity" Royal Palm. He attended NYU film school currently lives in a $3.6 M house in Beverly Hills. Ratner is also a good friend of Def Jam mogul Russell Simmons, and has directed music videos for many rap stars.

IMDb Mini Biography By: Fratboy2


Trade Mark

Opens his movies with a character singing.

Frequently casts Don Cheadle, Chris Tucker and Ken Leung.

Frequently casts Ken Leung.



Trivia
Engaged to Rebecca Gayheart. [1997]

Got his start by directing rap and hip-hop videos for his friend Russell Simmons. When the original director of Money Talks (1997) had to be replaced, Russell Simmons recommended him.

Attended Miami Beach Senior High.

Once vowed he would not direct movies until he had directed at least 100 music videos.

Without knowing him, Steven Spielberg and his company Amblin Entertainment sent him $5000 to finish funding for his final film project at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts after he sent out 20 letters to producers asking for help.

Dating Serena Williams. [2004]

His favorite film is Scarface (1932).

Was in pre-production for a remake of John Cassavetes' The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976) after he finished Rush Hour (1998). It was to be written by Cassavetes' son, Nick Cassavetes and Warren Beatty was set to star. Ratner left the project when he was offered The Family Man (2000).

Favorite film director is Hal Ashby.

After meeting with real life FBI agents, he decided that it would not be authentic to have Scott Glenn reprise the role of Jack Crawford in Red Dragon (2002), his The Silence of the Lambs (1991) prequel. Instead, he cast Harvey Keitel, in a role originally created by Dennis Farina in Manhunter (1986). Keitel and Farina had also both played Ray Barbone in the film Get Shorty (1995). Ratner was considered for directing the sequel to Get Shorty, entitled Be Cool (2005), in which Keitel also appears.

Ranked #81 on Premiere's 2003 annual Power 100 List. He did not rank on the 2004 list.

At Miami Beach Senior High School was a drama student of well-known instructor Jay W. Jensen.

Replaced director Matthew Vaughn just two months before filming began on X-Men: The Last Stand (2006).

Was for some time attached to direct Superman Returns (2006). He left the project because of repeated delays and difficulty in casting a lead actor. The project then went to Bryan Singer, while Ratner went on to direct X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), the two previous movies in the saga having been directed by Singer.

In Red Dragon (2002), digital technology was used to smooth over some of Anthony Hopkins's facial features so that he would look younger than he was in The Silence of the Lambs (1991). Similar technology was used in the first scene of X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), so that Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen could play their characters twenty years younger.

Considered directing Memoirs of a Geisha (2005).

His mother, Marsha Presman, was just 16 when she gave birth to her son.



Personal Quotes
"There's no difference between a tacky Jew from Miami and a rap star. They both want the Cadillac and the Rolex with the diamonds."

"In Hollywood you gotta keep the movement. You gotta have three or four projects and whichever one comes in first, or better, that's the one you're going to do."

"There are very few perfect films. I think Reservoir Dogs (1992) is close to being a perfect film".

"Why do I need final cut? Final cut is for artistes quote unquote--directors whose movies don't make a lot of money. Maybe Scorsese should have final cut because a guy like Harvey Weinstein or a studio might change it to make it a little more accessible or a little more commercial and he has a vision of what he wants it to be. He wants it to be four hours long or whatever."

[Explaining his recasting of the role of "Jack Crawford" with Harvey Keitel in Red Dragon (2002)]: When Jonathan Demme said make your own version, I couldn't see anyone but Anthony Hopkins and I couldn't see anyone but Anthony Heald as "Dr. Chilton". I can't see another acting doing it. But what happened was I went down to the FBI, and discovered they're like tough New York Cops. They weren't like Scott Glenn.

"No matter how successful you are, you are not invincible. The studio is writing the checks. It's all about leverage and who has the power. The goal is to get the biggest deal you can, because you are going to have to give something back to the studios anyway."

Am I Orson Welles? Obviously not. But 50 years from now, who knows how, as a person, I'll have grown. I've already changed, from being a 26-year-old kid to a 38-year-old guy - I'm not a man yet, really. But as I get older, who knows how my experiences and my knowledge, this past 12 years making movies, how that's all going to affect the movies that I make? I know that the life I lived from 16 to 26 allowed me to make a movie like Rush Hour, so now let's see...

In an action movie, I don't want to move the camera too much, because the movement should be within the frame. The same goes for comedy. You don't want to push in for a joke; it's plenty in a medium shot. Watch my jokes, they're never in close-up. If the audience feels the camera, it's horrible.



Salary
Rush Hour 3 (2007) $7,500,000
X-Men: The Last Stand (2006) $8.000.000 + A percentage of final net gross
Red Dragon (2002) $6,000,000
Rush Hour 2 (2001) $5,000,000
The Family Man (2000) $5,000,000


Where Are They Now
No longer involved in the production of a new Superman movie. Stated that the repeated delays and difficulty in casting a lead actor made it impossible for him to remain involved.


Director:

- Rush Hour 3 (2007)
- X-Men: The Last Stand (2006)
- "Prison Break" (1 episode, 2005)
- Pilot (2005) TV Episode
- Untitled David Diamond/David Weissman Project (2005) (TV)
- After the Sunset (2004)
- Red Dragon (2002)
- Rush Hour 2 (2001)
- The Family Man (2000)
- Mariah #1's (1999) (V) (video "Heartbreaker")
- Madonna: The Video Collection 93:99 (1999) (V) (video "Beautiful Stranger")
- Partners (1999) (TV)
- "Making the Video" (1999) TV Series (unknown episodes)
- Rush Hour (1998)
- Money Talks (1997)
- Whatever Happened to Mason Reese (1990)


From : www.imdb.com

วันพุธที่ 31 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2550

Bernardo Bertolucci



Date of Birth
16 March 1940, Parma, Emilia-Romagna, Italy


Height
5' 10½" (1.79 m)


Mini Biography
Bernardo Bertolucci, the Italian director whose films are known for their colorful visual style, was born in Parma, Italy, in 1940. He attended Rome University and became famous as a poet. He served as assistant director for Pier Paolo Pasolini in the film Accattone (1961) and directed Commare secca, La (1962). His second film, Prima della rivoluzione (1964), which was released in 1971, received an Academy Award nomination for best screenplay. Bertolucci also received an Academy Award nomination as best director for Ultimo tango a Parigi (1972), and the best director and best screenplay for the film The Last Emperor (1987), which walked away with nine Academy Awards.

IMDb Mini Biography By: Matt Dicker


Spouse

Clare Peploe (1990 - present)
Adriana Asti (? - ?) (divorced)


Trivia
Brother of Giuseppe Bertolucci, cousin of Giovanni Bertolucci.

Son of poet Attilio Bertolucci.

Born at 7:25pm-CET

Homage at the 48th Donostia-San Sebastián Film Festival. [2000]

Was voted the 44th Greatest Director of all time by Entertainment Weekly.

Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985". Pages 121-127. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.

The young Bertolucci took after his father, a Roman poet and film critic, and became a celebrated published poet by the age of 20. He gave up poetry for the cinema after working as an assistant to Pier Paolo Pasolini on the movie Accattone (1961).

President of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 1990

In July of 1990, along with Federico Fellini, Tonino Guerra and Marcello Mastroianni, he wrote: "With the death of Sergei Parajanov cinema lost one of its wizards.".



Personal Quotes
[on Los Angeles[ The Big Nipple.

[His answer on 2 October 1979 to a woman who had just seen a special screening of Luna, La (1979) at the Film Center of the School of the Art Institute, Chicago] I left the ending ambiguous, because that is the way life is.

I don't film messages. I let the post office take care of those.

I am still against any kind of censorship. It's a subject in my life that has been very important.

A monoculture is not only Hollywood, but Americans trying to export democracy. I don't think you can in any way export culture with guns or tanks. I think that I used to love Hollywood movies. I remember great phases and moments. But, unfortunately, now is not the moment.

[on making The Dreamers (2003)] . . . it gave me the chance of visiting a moment that I really loved a lot, the late 1960s. It was a kind of magic moment in many senses. There was a fantastic projection of the future, of utopias, which were very noble in some ways. I remember being young in the 1960s . . . we had a great sense of the future, a great big hope. This is what is missing in the youth today. This being able to dream and to change the world."

[In response to Ingmar Bergman's contention that Ultimo tango a Parigi (1972) (US title: "Last Tango in Paris") was really about homosexuals, and only in those terms did the film make sense and become interesting] I accept all interpretations of my films. The only reality is before the camera. Each film I make is kind of a return to poetry for me, or at least an attempt to create a poem.

You know for American filmmakers, the Oscars is like a mystic thing. For me it was being in a mirror of my dreams when I was dreaming of Hollywood when I was an adolescent.


Director:

- The Dreamers (2003)
- Ten Minutes Older: The Cello (2002) (segment "Histoire d'eaux")
- Besieged (1998)
- Stealing Beauty (1996)
- Little Buddha (1993)
- The Sheltering Sky (1990)
- 12 registi per 12 città (1989) (segment "Bologna")
- The Last Emperor (1987)
- Addio a Enrico Berlinguer, L' (1984)
- Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man (1981)
- Luna, La (1979)
- Novecento (1976)
- Last Tango in Paris (1972)
- Salute è malata, La (1971)
- Strategia del ragno (1970)
- Conformista, Il (1970)
- Amore e rabbia (1969) (segment "Agonia")
- Partner (1968)
- Via del petrolio, La (1967) (TV)
- Canale, Il (1966)
- Prima della rivoluzione (1964)
- Commare secca, La (1962)


From : www.imdb.com

วันอังคารที่ 30 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2550

Baz Luhrmann



Date of Birth
17 September 1962, New South Wales, Australia

Birth Name
Mark Anthony Luhrmann

Nickname
Baz

Mini Biography
Baz's parents did Ballroom competitions, thus growing up around the very subject matter of his first three films.

IMDb Mini Biography By: Christine Aldaz

Mini Biography
Luhrmann grew up in rural Australia and it was at his father's movie theatre that he first became enthralled by the world of movies and the power of story telling. He also encountered a variety of interesting people while working at the local gas station, and Luhrmann went on to use these experiences as a source for his own creativity. His most notable works to date are the three films that make up his Red Curtain Trilogy. The Red Curtain style of film making was devised by Luhrmann to actively promote audience participation, and the third movie in the trilogy, Moulin Rouge! (2001), has been his most successful film to date.

IMDb Mini Biography By: bazthegreat

Spouse
Catherine Martin (26 January 1997 - present) 2 children

Trade Mark
Frequently uses bright distinct colors and fast-paced editing.

Trivia
Baz Luhrmann presented and produced the song that hit the charts in 1999, "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)." The lyrics were written by Chicago Tribune columnist Mary Schmich, and the vocals were performed by Lee Perry.

Produced and directed a hit re-invention of the classic opera "La Boheme" for the stage in Sydney, taking place in the 1950s post-war Paris, stressing acting more than big "Pavarotti style voices", to create an experience for "people who might be a little intimidated by opera". It was eventually filmed in 1993 for PBS's "Great Performances".

Luhrmann and Catherine Martin's first child, Lillian (Lilly) Amanda Luhrmann, was born in Sydney on Friday, 10th October 2003.

His first three films, Strictly Ballroom (1992), Romeo + Juliet (1996), and Moulin Rouge! (2001), were dubbed the "Red Curtain Trilogy" as they all fell under a particular style of film making. Luhrmann the changed direction and plans to make a trilogy of historical epics, the first of these was to be "Alexander the Great", which was later dropped.

Did ballroom dance as a child.

His father died the first day of filming Moulin Rouge! (2001).

Family once owned a gas station and a farm.

In late 2004, he directed the world's most expensive advertisement for Chanel No 5, a 4-minute short film titled "No 5: The Film" starring Nicole Kidman (who he worked with for Moulin Rouge! (2001)) and Rodrigo Santoro. The film ad, about a fairy-tale romance in which Chanel is part of the story but is not what the story is about, cost £18 million and made Kidman a Guinness World Record holder for highest paid actress in a commercial (she netted $3.71 million). Varying length versions of the film ad were shown on television, and - a first for Chanel - in movie theaters. Costumes were designed by Karl Lagerfeld and a score by Claude Debussy. Kidman wore £17m worth of real gems.

Was nominated for Broadway's 2003 Tony Award as Best Director (Musical) for "La Boheme."

Son William Alexander Luhrmann was born June 8th, 2005

Was among the guests at Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban's wedding.

Wanted to make a movie about Alexander The Great with Leonardo DiCaprio in the lead role around the same time as Oliver Stone made his movie Alexander (2004), but this project was dropped.

Personal Quotes
"All the films I make are about 60% of what I imagine them to be"

"There's no doubt that when you're up for an award you want to win, but, finally, art is not a horse race. If Gladiator was a great film in its form and Crouching Tiger a great film in its form, which is better? They're just different. It's not a horse race. You can't say, you know, Gladiator is so much faster! "

"One of the proud moments for us was Robert Wise, who directed Sound of Music and West Side Story, he is the great-great grandfather of musical cinema and he said, "I've seen Moulin Rouge and the musical has been re-invented." I bring this up because you get that kind of thing and that's wonderful."

"So, what is creative freedom? We can make what we want, how we want. The only constraint is: not for any budget."

"That's the only plan I've got - to not have a plan."

"Well, it's pretty hard for them to sack me and put someone in to do iambic pentameter in modern dress, you know? What we've made, we only have one iron-clad guarantee every single time which is it will never work and no-one will ever see it. Because it has gone on to more than pay its bill, and, by varying degrees, it has been acclaimed, the notion that the studio interferes... I like to engage with them, I don't have a producer... There's a whole system in Hollywood where the director never speaks to the studio, but I like to engage them in a discussion. I listen. But then finally we listen to ourselves."

"...if you make a film full of risk, studios don't run towards you to give you $50,000,000 in order to reinvent the post-modern musical, I can tell you. If you do manage to cajole them into doing it and you want to maintain the flag of creative freedom, you better make sure that it pays its bill."

"There are successes and failures in what we're doing, but that's the road we're walking down - stealing from culture all over the place to write a code so that very quickly the audience can swing from the lowest possible comedy moment to the highest possible tragedy with a bit of music in the middle."

"So we thought, let's look back to a cinematic language where the audience participated in the form. Where they were aware at all times that they were watching a movie, and that they should be active in their experience and not passive. Not being put into a sort of sleep state and made to believe through a set of constructs that they are watching a real-life story through a keyhole. They are aware at all times that they are watching a movie. That was the first step in this theatricalised cinematic form that we now call the Red Curtain."

"So, yes, we won for ourselves a criteria, a mantra, which is that we only make what we want to make in the way we want to make it. I believe we make universal stories for the world, but it has an Australian voice, and to maintain that voice you must be connected to your land. So the need to be in Australia motivated us to motivate Fox to build this studio down there, where they now shoot Star Wars and The Matrix, so it's a wonderful facility."

"The primary myth part came out of a revelation of the value of Shakespeare. Those are dramas that play to the simple person and the complicated person."

"But above everything else, Shakespeare had to deal with a city of 400,000 people and a theatre that held 4,000 and everyone from the streetsweeper upwards. Not unlike your local cineplex, and he used everything possible to arrest and stop that audience - really bawdy comedy and then, wham! Something really beautiful and poetic. Everything we did in Romeo and Juliet was based on Elizabethan Shakespeare. The fact that there was pop music in it was a Shakespearean thing. We would be fearless about the lowness of the comedy."

"We went to this huge, icecream picture palace to see a Bollywood movie. Here we were, with 2,000 Indians watching a film in Hindi, and there was the lowest possible comedy and then incredible drama and tragedy and then break out in songs. And it was three-and-a-half hours! We thought we had suddenly learnt Hindi, because we understood everything! [Laughter] We thought it was incredible. How involved the audience were. How uncool they were - how their coolness had been ripped aside and how they were united in this singular sharing of the story. The thrill of thinking, 'Could we ever do that in the West? Could we ever get past that cerebral cool and perceived cool.' It required this idea of comic-tragedy. Could you make those switches? Fine in Shakespeare - low comedy and then you die in five minutes."

"The Red Curtain requires some basics. One is that the audience knows how it will end when it begins, it is fundamental that the story is extremely thin and extremely simple - that is a lot of labour. Then it is set in a heightened, created world. Then there is a device - the heightened world of Strictly Ballroom, Verona beach. Then there is another device - dance or iambic pentameter or singing, and that's there to keep the audience awake and engaged. The other thing is that this piece was to be a comic tragedy. This is an unusual form, there's been a few goes at it - [like] Dancer in the Dark - but it's not common in Western cinematic form."


Director:
- Moulin Rouge! (2001)
- Romeo + Juliet (1996)
- Strictly Ballroom (1992)



From : www.imdb.com

วันพุธที่ 10 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2550

Barry Sonnenfeld



Date of Birth
1 April 1953, New York, New York, USA

Mini Biography
Barry Sonnenfeld was born and raised in New York City. He graduated from New York University of Film School in 1978. After "refining" his craft on several hardcore porn films, he started work as director of photography on the Oscar-nominated In Our Water (1982). Then Joel Coen and Ethan Coen hired him for Blood Simple. (1984). This film began his collaboration with the Coen Bros., who used him for their next two pictures, Raising Arizona (1987) and Miller's Crossing (1990). He also worked with Danny DeVito on his Throw Momma from the Train (1987) and Rob Reiner on When Harry Met Sally... (1989) and Misery (1990). Sonnenfeld got his first work as a director from Orion Pictures on The Addams Family (1991), a box-office success released in November 1991. Its sequel, Addams Family Values (1993), was not so successful at the box office, but he got critical acclaim for his fourth directorial effort, Get Shorty (1995). Produced by Jersey Films and based on a novel by Elmore Leonard, the film won a Golden Globe for best male performance. In 1996 Steven Spielberg asked him to direct Men in Black (1997). Starring Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith, the movie was a critical and financial smash. Producer Jon Peters then asked Sonnenfeld to direct Wild Wild West (1999), an adaptation of an old TV series. This was certainly NOT well received! He also directed the comedy Big Trouble (2002), after which he made his most successful film sequel, Men in Black II (2002).

IMDb Mini Biography By: Alex Manca

Spouse

Susan Ringo (1989 - present) 1 child

Trade Mark
Directs mainstream films that have an offbeat quality to them.

Frequently casts Siobhan Fallon.

Trivia
Was uninjured when a private jet he was travelling in collided with five empty 'planes after a rough landing in Van Nuys, California. [16 February 1999]

Started his career directing porn films. He's quoted in the January 26, 1998 Newsweek magazine (page 60) saying that he was depressed when he heard that Boogie Nights (1997) was being made (a film about making pornos) because he had wanted to make a movie about the time he shot 9 feature length pornos in nine days.

NYU Film School Assistant to Elliott Erwitt.

Lives in Long Island, NY.

Loves to eat smoked whitefish.

Was offered the job of directing Forrest Gump (1994), but declined. The job then went to Robert Zemeckis, who won an Academy Award for it.

Has a private bathroom designed to look like a public bathroom, complete with stalls and urinals in his house in New York.

One of his most embarrassing moments occurred when he was a teenager attending his first rock concert. His mom had the PA announcer say, "Barry Sonnenfeld, call your mother."

Nephew of Vaudeville and screen comedian Gus Schilling, whose voice likeness he inherited genetically.

Father of Chloe Sonnenfeld.

Has stated in many interviews that before making Men in Black he was considering doing a live-action film version of The Jetsons. With Jim Carrey playing George Jetson and Nicole Kidman playing Jane Jetson.

Was set to direct "Fun with Dick and Jane" (2005), but bowed out citing personal reasons.

Personal Quotes
About Men in Black (1997): "It's basically a remake of The French Connection (1971) with aliens as a comedy."


Director :
- "Pushing Daisies" (3 episodes, 2007)
The Fun in Funeral (2007) TV Episode
Dummy (2007) TV Episode
Pie-lette (2007) TV Episode

- "Notes from the Underbelly" (5 episodes, 2007)
Mother's Milk (2007) TV Episode
Julie and Eric's Baby (2007) TV Episode
Million Dollar Baby (2007) TV Episode
Animal Style (2007) TV Episode
Pilot (2007) TV Episode

- RV (2006)
- Men in Black 2 (2002)
- Big Trouble (2002)
- "The Tick" (1 episode, 2001)
Pilot (2001) TV Episode
- Wild Wild West (1999)
- "Maximum Bob" (1998) TV Series (unknown episodes)
- Men in Black (1997)
- Get Shorty (1995)
- Addams Family Values (1993)
- For Love or Money (1993)
- The Addams Family (1991)


From : http://www.imdb.com

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 4 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2550

Apichatpong Weerasethakul



Date of Birth
16 July 1970, Bangkok, Thailand

Nickname
Joe

Mini Biography
Apichatpong Weerasethakul (b. 1970, Bangkok) grew up in Khon Kaen, a city in the north east of Thailand. He has a degree in Architecture from Khon Kaen University and a Master of Fine Arts in Filmmaking from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has been making films and videos since the early 90s. He is one of the few filmmakers in Thailand who have worked outside the strict Thai studio system. In his films, he experiments with certain elements found in the dramatic plot structure of Thai television and radio programs, comics and old films. He finds his inspiration in small towns around the country. In his work, he often uses non-professional actors and improvised dialogue in exploring the shifting boundaries between documentary and fiction.

In 2000, he completed his first feature, Dokfa nai meuman (2000), a documentary that has been screened at many international festivals and received enthusiastic reviews and awards as well as being listed among the best films of the year 2000 by Film Comment and the Village Voice. He is active in promoting experimental and independent films through Kick the Machine, the company he founded in 1999. He is currently working on several video projects and a new feature, Tropical Malady.

IMDb Mini Biography By: Anonymous

Trade Mark
The opening credits always come in several minutes into the film.

Films are usually in two parts of parallels and contrasts.

Trivia
Graduated from Khon Kaen University in Thailand in 1994.

Received his MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1997.

Worked as an architect and multi-media artist before becoming a filmmaker.

Both his parents were doctors. They had a practice in Khon Khaen.

Studied architecture.

Personal Quotes
I was very shy, so I didn't really interact well with others. My friends were the kids of doctors, because we all lived in the hospital housing unit. Even now I like hospitals - that sterilised smell, it brings back all these memories. I'd see a lot of sick and dying people, but at the time, I didn't have a big philosophical way of thinking about illness and death. To me, it was just people - they come and go.

When Blissfully Yours won a prize at Cannes, a studio got interested and bought the distribution rights, but they didn't understand this kind of film; they opened it in huge multiplexes, and people expected big entertainment. So my film really disappointed people.

"Architecture taught me how to look at things and how to accommodate people in certain spaces. People experience space, beauty, in true time, and film is also like journeying through time."


Director :
- Estado do Mundo, O (2007) (segment "Luminous People")
- Syndromes and a Century (2006)
- Ghost of Asia (2005)
- Worldly Desires (2005)
- Tropical Malady (2004)
- The Adventures of Iron Pussy (2003)
- Blissfully Yours (2002)
- Masumi Is a PC Operator (2001)
- Mysterious Object at Noon (2000)
- Boys at Noon (2000)
- Malee and the Boy (1999)
- Thirdworld (1998)
- Like the Relentless Fury of the Pounding Waves (1996)
- 0016643225059 (1994)
- Kitchen and Bedroom (1994)
- Bullet (1993)


From : http://www.imdb.com