
Krabi, 2562 - Krabi, 2562(Blu Ray) [Anti-World Releasing - 2020]Krabi, 2562 sells its self as an arty & dream-like critique of Thailand- its present/ past, and it’s tourist trade- focusing in on the coastal town of Krabi on the southern coast of the country. The film is decidedly slow & lulling mixture of slightly quirky & mysterious drama, travelogue footage, and interviews with local folk. From Anti-World Releasing here, we have a recent Blu Ray release of the film- bringing together a directors commentary, a selection of other short films by the same team, and a few other extras. Made in 2019 Krabi, 2562 is a Thai/ British production- it was jointly directed by British cinematographer/ experimental filmmaker Ben Rivers, and Thai director/ producer Anocha Suwichakornpong. And while the whole thing is certainly well shot, and from time-to-time some of what they are trying to do clicks- largely the film felt almost thrown together, often amateurish, and crawling slow- even though it comes in at around the hour and a half mark.
The formal plot/ story of the film focuses in on two groups of people- an international team filming an advert off the coast of Krabi with its impressive backdrop of rocky & monolithic limestone islands. And an unnamed young female traveller- who shifts from being a location scout, working in some form of public research, to seemingly disappearing. Around the decidedly flimsy & dull interaction between these two groups- Rivers & Suwichakornpong place seemingly unrelated, and largely point-less visuals- taking shots of road travel, Krabi town, & the Thai countryside. From time-to-time a on-camera interview will pop-up and subject wise we have: a local elderly man who was once a boxer, the hotel clerk, a bubble female tour guide- and none of these are particularly insightful or interesting. The whole thing really does drag, drag along- with the shots hovering too long, and the whole structure/ tone of the film seems flippant & flat.
I do enjoy both arthouse film, and documentary- and very much enjoy when the two meet- for example some of Herzog’s work. The concept/ idea of Krabi, 2562 certainly sounded promising on paper with its supposable blurring of fact, fiction, past & present- but it’s all done in such a lazy, lose, and lulling pretentious manner. I had two or three watches through of the film, and each time it annoyed me even more with its twee smugness & haphazard mixing of footage.
Moving onto the extras, and you certainly get a good & bountiful amount. First, there’s the commentary track- featuring Rivers, Suwichakornpong & one of the films sound editor/ sound recordist- who pops in & out of the track. It’s certainly a fairly chatty & informative track- with them talking about how/ when certainly shots where made, actors & none actors who appear, and some of the concepts they try & get across in the film- so if you did get something from Krabi, 2562 then I feel you’ll gain worth from it. Next, we get a three minute deleted scene, Mahasajan Phapphyon- a continually looped sequence from the film. Next, we get four films by both Rivers & Suwichakornpong- these run between forty-six minutes & ten minutes. The longest film is Ghost Strata, which is directed by Rivers, and it's a diary film- playing out a years worth of imagery, travelogue footages, speeches, interviews & behind the scenes footage from Krabi, 2562- and I’m afraid it didn’t grab me, and felt like it was thrown together. The other three films are once again a mix of different footage, speakers, etc- that blur the lines between fact & fiction- again I’m afraid none of these grabbed me. Next, we get ten Soundworks from Ernst Karel the sound designer on Krabi, 2562- in total they run for whopping one hundred and thirty-six minutes- these are basically created by sound elements he recorded for the film- I played a few of these, and I hate to be negative once again- but they felt rather dull & uninspired- and this is coming from someone who enjoys/ regularly reviews soundart & untouched field recordings. The finished version of the release comes with a thirty-six-page booklet- taking in new writing about the film, an interview with the directors, and Karel discussing his sound work for the film.
I certainly respected & admire Anti- world for hunting down, and putting out original & distinctive art-house films/ documentaries. And I very enjoyed two of the first batch of films they released at the start of this year- the vapid-yet-unsettling low key crime film Holiday, and the surreal slacker film Relaxer- but I’m afraid Krabi, 2562 just wasn’t for me…..maybe if you have more insight in to Thai culture, or enjoy lulling blends of footage it may do something for you.
     Roger Batty
|