BANGKOK — Five years after it was banned by the
government, the fate of a Thai adaptation of a Shakespeare play will be
decided by a court next month, according to the film’s producer.
On Aug. 11, the Administrative Court will decide whether the
infamously banned film “Shakespeare Must Die” can be released in cinemas
and whether the production team is entitled to 7.5 million baht
compensation, the film’s producer, famed photographer Manit
Sriwanichpoom.
“Shakespeare Must Die,” directed by Samanrat Kanjanavanit, is a 2012
film based on William Shakespeare’s “Macbeth.” The film was funded by
the Culture Ministry, yet it was ultimately rejected by censors on the
national film board for its politically charged content.
“Thailand has been lost because our imagination was locked up in an
underground prison, tied down with chains. Any nation without freedom
for films … has no way forward and will never be free,” Samanrat wrote
July 5 in an open letter to the court.
The film was banned in April 2012 by the board for containing “content that divides the people.” Samanrat and Manit sued the board in August of the same year demanding the ban be lifted and 7.5 million baht in compensation.
From http://www.khaosodenglish.com/news/crimecourtscalamity/courts/2017/07/26/banned-film-shakespeare-must-die-get-decision-5-years/
0 comments:
Post a Comment