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Revision as of 02:19, 10 May 2006 editEsn (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users16,839 edits If anyone knows the Thai name, please help! Unfortunately, there is no IMDB profile for this film.  Revision as of 02:27, 10 May 2006 edit undoEsn (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users16,839 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
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'''''The Adventure of Sudsakorn''''' (]: '''???'''), also known as '''The Adventure of Sud Sakorn''', is the only ] ]-] ever made. It was directed by ] and released in Thailand on ] Day, ], ]. Since then, it has ocassionally been seen at film festivals around the world. '''''The Adventure of Sudsakorn''''' (]: '''???'''), also known as '''The Adventure of Sud Sakorn''', is the only ] ]-] ever made. It was directed by ] and released in Thailand on ] Day, ], ]. Since then, it has ocassionally been seen at film festivals around the world. It is not currently known to be available on DVD or video - if it is, please edit this page.


==Plot== ==Plot==

Revision as of 02:27, 10 May 2006

1979 Thai film
The Adventure of Sudsakorn
Poster
Directed byPayut Ngaokrachang
Written byPayut Ngaokrachang (?)
Sunthorn Phu (main character)
Release datesApril 13, 1979 (Thailand)
Running time82 min
CountryThailand
LanguageThai

The Adventure of Sudsakorn (Thai: ???), also known as The Adventure of Sud Sakorn, is the only Thai cel-animated film ever made. It was directed by Payut Ngaokrachang and released in Thailand on Songkran Day, April 13, 1979. Since then, it has ocassionally been seen at film festivals around the world. It is not currently known to be available on DVD or video - if it is, please edit this page.

Plot

File:Sudsakorn.gif
Screenshot from the film

Ngaokrachang chose to animate the story of "Sud Sakorn" a character from Phra Aphai Mani, a 30,000-line epic written by Thailand's best-known poet, Sunthorn Phu.

Template:Spoilers Sud Sakorn, 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.

"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."

Awards

References

External links

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