Momo Distribution Grant // 4 March 2024

“The audiovisual works of Naween Noppakun” by Thai PBS // 9 Feb 2024

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Le Polyester // 6 Feb 2024

 

Thai director – Naween Noppakun – has just been crowned at the Rotterdam Film Festival with his mind-blowing short film Crazy Lotus. People are immersed in an alternative, confusing and dizzying world. Between SF reverie and experimental film, Crazy Lotus is an incredible journey which gives the impression of wearing the same psychedelic glasses as the protagonists. This dream of sparkling pinks and purples, investing in the strangest reality, is of a radical absurdity which makes us ask: “but what are we seeing?” . This is indeed an exciting question to ask yourself while watching a film. Naween Noppakun presents this indescribable short film.

 


 

What was the starting point for Crazy Lotus?

I needed to make a film about being in the age of remote connection. In the virtual world, I can have a friend or know someone’s life, without that person even being aware of who I am. How is it possible ? This question still haunts me. I also know that in the microscopic world, the probability of two atoms meeting is very rare. I see a similarity between our everyday life and atoms. Then I began creating the fictional dimension called Blank Clock, where the inhabitants rarely meet in person. If the opportunity presents itself, in the film, it is called Good Seconds.

I am also drawn to spring tides caused by the powerful force of gravity between the earth, sun and moon. This process interests me because it is the obvious outcome of instability, and this is what I also retain from the Buddhist concept. I can see a certain relationship between scientific forces (mechanical, quantum and gravity) and the essence of Buddhism.

In the film, Crazy Lotus is an entropy phenomenon of sight and hearing, around the shore of Blank Clock during spring tides. No one knows the mechanism behind it, and this phenomenon prevents Good Seconds from taking place. However, there is energy in the unknown, the unthinkable and the unimaginable. And someone in Crazy Lotus is trying to invent something in order to get these Good Seconds.

 


 

You have managed to create a whole visual universe for your film. How did you work on the decor and urban spaces to make it seem like everything is happening in another dimension?

I think this comes largely from the overflowing lighting effect, which makes them look like a sort of non-place. We don’t see this in everyday reality. My intention is to create a completely fictional universe without any point of reference to our reality. I wanted the visual aspect to be plastic, materialist, while being a critique of capitalism, like the work of Jeff Koons. I don’t intend to make the public believe this story because it would seem real. I wanted Crazy Lotus to look real and unreal at the same time. The concept of “eternal in-between” is also applied here.

 


 

Can you tell us about your striking use of color in Crazy Lotus?

The pink color comes from the twilight sky of Bangkok as we can sometimes observe it. This twilight pink is quite rare and only occurs when a series of coincidences come together. They are my Good Seconds. Twilight is the transition from light to dark and vice versa. It creates confusion and happiness at the same time. It’s the only moment where I feel the implosion of the present.

In the film, Blank Clock is a non-temporal dimension. It’s something that sits in between, for eternity, with endless possibilities, so the color twilight pink is the perfect answer to use for the entire film. The pixelated colors come from a visual technique whose concept I borrowed from spectral music. Metaphorically, these colors constitute a harmonic series of musical notes for me.

 


 

Who are your favorite filmmakers and/or who inspire you?

The works of Jean-Luc Godard, Robert Bresson and Marguerite Duras constitute my favorite triangle. Their cinematic language and their thoughts on what cinema can be inspired me in such a way that I will do my best to continue their unfinished tasks. The early works of David Cronenberg (like Videodrome) and George Lucas (like THX1138) also play a big role in my interest in science fiction filmmaking!

 


 

When was the last time you had the feeling of seeing something new, of discovering a new talent on screen?

I just had this feeling at the Rotterdam Festival! Some works in the short film competition blew me away. I have also seen feature films from the Limelight program, which are like a new cinematic experience for me. I think that’s the best thing about participating in a film festival like Rotterdam. I am always looking for new language possibilities in the virtual world. I like watching more and more TikTok videos. These videos have a language of their own, and it is also a form of novelty.

 

Translated from Le Polyester ( 6 Feb 2024 )

“AKA”

The Grill & Lemon Bomb Shot

(Full HD, Color)
Film Director

“Crazy Lotus” (บัวบ้า )

(HD, Color, Thai, 15 minutes)
Director, Editor, Screen Writer, Animator, Visual Effects

 


Awards

Tiger Short Award – 53rd International Film Festival Rotterdam

Best Experimental Short – 5th Film Maudit 2.0

 


Synopsis

A new invention causes mysterious occurrences as people stroll around between infinite possibilities.

 


Reviews

“…infinitely profound–extending itself into the far reaches of the universe. The longer the film plays, the further it expands.” Bain’s Film Reviews

“…a range of images from wildly ecstatic to richly mundane….The film creates its own sci-fi lexicon..” – Horror DNA

 


Distributed by


With the support of

 


Developed in

Berlinale Short Form Station 2020.

“We Love Me” ( เรารักเรา )

(HD, Color, Thai, 13 minutes)
Director, Editor, Screen Writer, Sound Designer

 


Awards

Audience Award, Deframed Competition – 34th Hamburg International Short Film Festival

Jury Prize, International Competition – 20th Paris Festival for Different and Experimental Cinema

First Prize – 9th FIVA International Video Art Festival Buenos Aires

Honorable Mention – 6th Macau International Video Art Festival

 


Synopsis

The heavily compressed time and space where all survival images from my memory live in. After journey, what will remain could be something we cannot talk to, but perceive.

 


With the support of

 


Distributed By

Collectif Jeune Cinema ( admin@cjcinema.org ), Video Out ( distribution@vivomediaarts.com )

 


Reviews

“…Possibly the most exciting example of complex sound/image relationships – the stuff of pure cinema, really.” – Cinema Scope

“This transgressive masterstroke of inappropriate actions will definitely leave you breathless.” – Jesse Hawthorne Ficks

“Naween Noppakun proposes a way for the recovery of the self by unveiling the layers, produced by cultural media and producers, that cover or disguise this alienation” – Desistfilm

 


Interview

# 18th Seoul International NewMedia Festival ( in Korean language*)

“When Her Light Is Extinguished” ( เมื่อแสงดับ )

(HD, B/W, Thai, 10 minutes)
Director, Producer, Screen Writer, Sound Designer

 


Award

3rd Place, Short film Category, 8th ReelheART International Film Festival

 


Synopsis

Conversation between buddha statue and a woman who tries to escape from a spirit in her dream.

 


Distributed by

Video Out ( distribution@vivomediaarts.com )

 


Film Stills

Shorts_001