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Syndromes And A Century [2006] [DVD]

Apichatpong Weerasethakul    Suitable for 15 years and over   DVD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Frequently Bought Together

Syndromes And A Century [2006] [DVD] + Tropical Malady (Sud Pralad) [2004] [DVD] + Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives [DVD]
Price For All Three: £29.49

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Product details

  • Directors: Apichatpong Weerasethakul
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: Thai
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.66:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Bfi
  • DVD Release Date: 23 Jun 2008
  • Run Time: 105 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0016P425W
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 55,510 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Product Description

Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul's acclaimed drama that blurs the boundary between past and present and explores the subjectivity of memory. Flipping back and forth between the real and surreal, it is a warm and humorous film about the director's recollections of his parents, both doctors, before they fell in love.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Movie magician 16 Oct 2010
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
It's always a cause for celebration when- 1) a moviemaker comes along with a entirely new way of story telling through the medium of film (a medium so mired in cliches we're almost primed to expect certain conventions) and 2) finds a way to get on film aspects of our existence that we never imagined could ever be articulated. (Well OK, they could be articulated, but are never thought important enough to most directors). Even the non religious among us, must at some time reflect on what we call 'spirit' and the 'mystery' of our existence, and have thoughts on the past and the future... and yet without being overtly religious, how many filmmakers have made that the centre of vision? It helps in that sense that Weerasethakul is Buddhist... and this film is again, like Tropical Malady, a film of two halves. You see the same young man interviewed again, but in a different setting. Things repeat but you see them from odd angles. Nothing is ever spelt out. But what is mysterious is never mysterious in the David Lynch sense. There is nothing to puzzle out. Things exist, but thinking logically about them only gets you so far. Watching a Weerasethakul film, makes you always think, that perhaps there is another one of you, living your exact same life, somewhere else in the world, who is you and yet is not you. I somehow come out of his films thinking that my potential for living has somehow doubled!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Mysterious and beautiful 27 May 2012
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
Apichatpong Weerasethakul (yes, I copied and pasted the name) is one of my favourite directors, though this is not my fav film of his, I think it's an excellent film nonetheless. Maybe a good film to start with when coming to this thai director.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.3 out of 5 stars  6 reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Subtle and unusual but gripping exploration of memory and love and the difference a few decades can make 14 Jan 2008
By Nathan Andersen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
Although he studied filmmaking in the United States, Thai filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul seems almost to reinvent cinema with each new film. There is something very refreshing about the contemplative style of camera work and the associative approach to editing, an approach that feels like it doesn't belong to the standard lineages of cinematic technique, but doesn't feel like incompetence either -- it just feels like something very different from what one is used to. His approach in this film is not so much to tell a story as to evoke a memory (if you saw this film without knowing that it is based loosely on his recollection of what his parents told him about how they got together, it would still feel more like layers of memory than a present day unfolding). Loosely, you could say that the story is about (1) two people (the director's parents) who met in a hospital and got together, a few decades ago; and (2) how their connection is difficult to reconcile with modern day practices, that these two would not be likely to connect now. But there is much more to the film than this outline suggests -- it is also a meditation on the place of religion and religious practice in Thailand a few decades ago versus today (dialogue that made sense a few decades ago feels like a joke today; practices once believed in and revered are now, at best, thought of as techniques; aerobics replaces yoga; shrines to the Buddha are replaced by statues of military leaders, etc.); it is also an exploration of sound and how sound reveals places and the emptiness of the sound that occupies modernized buildings; it is also a reflection on filmmaking itself, that has non-actors who make clear that they are non-actors, and even refer offscreen to their awkwardness on screen. It is a densely layered film, with a lot going on that is not easily summarizable in terms of an overarching theme or narrative -- a fascinating film, that nevertheless requires a good deal of patience and reflection, not for those with short attention spans.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Weerasethakul is a cinematic force to be reckoned with 4 July 2010
By Le_Samourai - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
In Syndromes and a Century, Apichatpong Weerasethakul revisits the bifurcated structure of his earlier feature films, Blissfully Yours and Tropical Malady as well as the fragmented, dissociative visual and aural images of his experimental short, The Relentless Fury of the Pounding Waves to create a languid, lyrical, organic, and contemplative exposition on the malleability and impermanence of a person's sense of place, a reality defined by a conflation of past and present, located both in the concreteness of geography and the ephemerality of memory. A chronicle of the parallel lives and quotidian encounters of a pair of physicians (presumably based on the filmmaker's parents) as well as an enterprising dentist named Dr. Ple (Arkanae Cherkam) who moonlights as a traditional ballad singer - ambiguously unfolding in either contemporaneity or temporal ellipsis - a female country doctor named Dr. Toey (Nantarat Sawaddikul) and a male city doctor and recently discharged military veteran named Dr. Nohng (Jaruchai Iamaram), the film is also an illustration of the recursiveness and atemporality of human behavior that not only reflects the intrinsic (and intuitive) repetition in the performance of mundane rituals, but also underscores the interconnectedness of a collective consciousness enabled by the accretive cycle of spiritual reincarnation: the performance of a staff psychological evaluation and physical examination prior to assignment to a hospital ward, the interactive complications of diagnosing and treating insular (and old-fashioned) monks, the integration of traditional and modern medicine in patient treatment, the intoxication of new love, the ache of longing, the inevitability of separation. Presented through a series of allusive, often complementary images - a visual theme that is figuratively reinforced in the transfixing image of the occluding eclipse that is subsequently repeated in the industrial image of smoke suction through the flue of a hospital exhaust system undergoing renovation, as well as literally through the film's penultimate sequences shot from the basement of a hospital where prosthetic limbs are fabricated and stored (the physical complementation of a disabled patient) - the film is an evocative and impressionistic meditation on the persistence - and indefinable elusiveness - of human memory.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars impressionistic art film 19 Jan 2008
By Roland E. Zwick - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
It's important to point out that the films of Apichatpong Weerasethakul are clearly an acquired taste. This Thai director makes movies that bear only a passing resemblance to the kind of narrative-laced dramas with which audiences in the West are most comfortable and familiar. His works reflect a Buddhist philosophy of deep inner reflection and unhurried contemplation of the moment - and, thus, they demand patience and an open mind from the viewer. But those willing to sample the strange exotic brew that is "Syndromes and a Century" (the title itself is enigmatic) will find ample rewards in the consumption.

There's little point in trying to explain what "Syndromes and a Century" is "about," since it serves no purpose to think of a Weerasethakul film in such terms. As a largely impressionistic work, the movie is more concerned with mood, feeling and setting than it is with conventional drama. Watching a Weerasethakul film is a bit like trying to solve a puzzle for which very few clues are provided. The "story," such as it is, involves two doctors - a woman working in a rural clinic and a man working in a big-city hospital - and their various encounters with patients, lovers and colleagues. We're told that the story was inspired by the romance of Weerasethakul's parents, though the obscurity of its presentation renders that explanation virtually meaningless. Often, an earlier scene is enacted a second time, though in an entirely different setting and from an opposing angle. This leads to even more confusion on the part of the viewer.

But it is style, rather than plot, that is of primary importance here. "Syndromes and a Century" is comprised almost entirely of beautifully composed and rigorously sustained medium and long shots, with few close-ups, very little camera movement and only minimal editing within scenes. Thus, even though we may not always understand fully what is going on, we are lulled into the movie by the seductive, hypnotic rhythms and style of the filmmaking.

"Syndromes and a Century" is not as compelling as Weerasethakul's previous film, the lushly transcendent and utterly spellbinding "Tropical Malady," but it should definitely appeal to anyone with a taste for the enigmatic, the exotic and the abstract.
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