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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
Production started in ] and was plagued with shortages of capital, personnel and equipment. For the first six months, the crew had 100 workers, but by the second year their numbers were reduced to nine. | Production started in ] and was plagued with shortages of capital, personnel and equipment. For the first six months, the crew had 100 workers, but by the second year their numbers were reduced to nine shamam king card game 3. | ||
"I made a lot of my equipment from pieces I got from junk of World War II military surplus," Payut told writer John A. Lent. "I'd find a screw here, a crank there, etc. I used a combat camera and adapted it. I pulled together pieces of wood, aluminum, whatever I could find." | "I made a lot of my equipment from pieces I got from junk of World War II military surplus," Payut told writer John A. Lent. "I'd find a screw here, a crank there, etc. I used a combat camera and adapted it. I pulled together pieces of wood, aluminum, whatever I could find." |
Revision as of 13:50, 9 May 2007
1979 Thai filmThe Adventure of Sudsakorn | |
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Poster | |
Directed by | Payut Ngaokrachang |
Written by | Payut Ngaokrachang Sunthorn Phu (main character) |
Release dates | April 13, 1979 (Thailand) |
Running time | 82 min |
Country | Thailand |
Language | Thai |
The Adventure of Sudsakorn (Template:Lang-th, also The Adventure of Sud Sakorn, Sudsakhorn Adventure or Soodsakorn) is at 1979 Thai animated fantasy film. The only cel-animated feature film ever made in Thailand, it was directed by Payut Ngaokrachang. It was released in Thailand on Songkran Day, April 13, 1979. Since then, it has occasionally been seen at film festivals around the world but has not been made available for international audiences on DVD or video. In 2006, the story was adapted into a Thai live-action fantasy film, The Legend of Sudsakorn.
The story is based on Phra Aphai Mani, a 30,000-line epic written by Thailand's best-known poet, Sunthorn Phu.
Plot
Template:Spoilers Sudsakorn, the son of a mermaid and a musician, fights on different occasions, an elephant, shark, and dragon horse, and encounters in his meanderings a king, a hermit, a yogi, a magic wand, and ghosts. Template:Endspoilers
Background
Production started in 1976 and was plagued with shortages of capital, personnel and equipment. For the first six months, the crew had 100 workers, but by the second year their numbers were reduced to nine shamam king card game 3.
"I made a lot of my equipment from pieces I got from junk of World War II military surplus," Payut told writer John A. Lent. "I'd find a screw here, a crank there, etc. I used a combat camera and adapted it. I pulled together pieces of wood, aluminum, whatever I could find."
The intense, detailed work on Sudsakorn impaired Payut's eyesight. "I did all the key drawings myself, even the layout and design ... I was almost blind from doing that film and now I wear contacts. My right eye is long, my left is short, crooked because of all that detailed work."
References
- Lent, John A. (April 1997). "A Screw Here, a Crank There". Animation World Magazine, Issue 2.1.
- Danutra, Pattara and Himes, Robert (January 1, 2004). "Payut Ngaokrachang: The Master of Thai Animations", Thai Film Foundation.
See also
- List of animated feature films
- List of films based on poems
- Khan Kluay (Thailand's first computer-animated film)
External links
Cinema of Thailand | |||
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