previously published on Asian Movie Pulse
The
directorial debut of Phuttiphong Aroonpheng called “Manta Ray”
premiered in the Orizonti section at this year’s edition of Venice,
scooping the main award and getting on an extended festival tour that
included Toronto, Vancouver, Busan, Thessaloniki (where it pocketed
Best Director award for Aroonpheng, Artistic Achievement award for
the cinematographer Nawarophaat Rungphiboonsophit and Human Values
award) and, among others, Zagreb, scoring Special Mention in the main
competition. Austere in dialogue, but rich in atmosphere, this film
realized in Thai-French-Chinese co-production puts its
writer-director in the spotlight as someone worth attention in the
future.
“Manta
Ray” starts with a dedication to Rohinya, a stateless people which
faces horrific persecution by the government forces in their homeland
in north-western Myanmar. Many Rohinya are driven out of their homes
and they live as refugees in the other states of South and South-East
Asia, in Arab countries (the majority of Rohinya are Muslims) and in
the Western World. Some of them are being smuggled into Thailand
which is, as the region’s most Western-oriented country in the
political sense, considered to be a decent starting point before
seeking political refuge somewhere else. But the welcome they are
facing is usually far from being warm and it can get pretty violent.
Those
things, however, are not easy to be read from the film itself, but
are a part of Aroonpheng’s production notes which he frequently
uses in his interviews and festival appearances, since “Manta Ray”
is primarily about the humane experiences like melancholy, poverty
and solitude. However, the first thing we should see after the title
card is a man patrolling the coastal region, lit up with Christmas
lights and with a gun in his hands. We never learn his name, only his
unorthodox appearance with his hair dyed blond and his never-changing
daily routing of work on a fishing boat and patrols with his
colleagues.
On
one of his rounds, the nameless fisherman (played by Wanlop
Rungkamjad) finds a severely wounded, mute Rohinya man (Aphisit Hama)
he takes home and nurses to health. He even names him Thongchai,
after his favourite singer Thongchai “Bird” McIntyre (apparently,
considered to be evergreen in Thailand). Thongchai appreciates the
help he gets and quickly learns the skills his host teaches him, like
fishing, motorbike driving and digging for sparkly gems that are to
be used later to attract the titular fish. The fisherman, on the
other hand, appreciates having company and someone to talk to and to
share his pain with. However, when he disappears following a
suspicious phone conversation with his boss, Thongchai takes over his
life, his job and his wife (a music star Rasmee Wayrana in her acting
debut)…
A
voiceless refugee might seem as a heavy symbol, especially in the
times of refugee crises all over the world, but it actually works
well on the cinematic level. The pain both Thongchai and his host are
sharing is not so different after all, they were both with limited
chances, restricted to poverty and for them the life has always been
an uphill struggle. Also, that enables Aroonpheng to show rather than
to tell, to use the visual language, the music and the atmosphere
less to tell a specific story that unfolds in a meditative pace, and
more to create a certain feeling of being a failure, pushed to the
margin of society, but also regaining trust in humanity.
With
not much dialogue to work with, the actors do a terrific job of
showing the chemistry among them and recreating an unlikely
friendship. That especially goes for Hama who has to act in very fine
nuances, which he does fine. Rungkamjad’s challenge is, however, of
the other kind, not exactly the lack of dialogue, but the lack of
significance in the words he speaks since he speaks them to a silent
recipient and not necessarily to the audience and he excels in it.
Even
more interesting are the formal aspects of film, the visuals, the set
design, the editing and the sound scheme. Cinematographer Nawarophaat
Rungphiboonsophit does a brilliant job balancing the poetic value of
the dream-like almost surreal moments between the two men with the
grit of the daily life in a poor fishing village, and being a
cinematographer himself, Aroonpheng is able to communicate what he
exactly wants. The editing by Lee Chatametikool and Harin Paesongthai
is superb, while the music by the French duo Christine Ott and
Mathieu Gabry fits in well.
“Manta
Ray” is not a piece of political statement, nor it is a futile
exercise in form. It is an accomplished debut feature, an immersive,
strong experience that needs to be seen, heard and felt.
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