Phee Ta Boh
has one of the best and coolest posters ever made in Thailand , with artwork you will
remember directly and never forget. It's not that special, but the sight of a
man stretching forward his hand holding his own eyes is a good idea, and for
once it's also something that actually happens in the movie itself. I have this
movie on VCD, and decided to finally - the last hours of 2011, finally give it
a spin. I heard both good and bad things about, and the good news is that it's
actually quite decent - but could have been much better without some parts of
the story. Let me tell you...
Saard
Piampongsarn plays a mad scientist working in his lab in the jungle. He has a
staff of heroine addicts who kidnaps people, mostly women, who he kills and
take the eyes from. Why? Because he once upon a time he married a beautiful
woman and became the happiest couple in the world (which we knows because the
scenes with them are in front of sunsets, on the beach and on a wedding).
Something happens - illness, accident - and she goes blind. Now his whole life
evolves around making the first eye-transplantation. One day he sees a handsome
man (Porjed Kaenpetch) who have PERFECT eyes. Saard kidnaps him, kills him and
finally succeeds in making his wife see again. But his stupid staff wants to
have some fun and asks their friend the black magician to do some magic - and
by mistake the wake up Porjed again and now he's back for vengeance - and his
beautiful eyes!
This is
Eyes Without a Face/The Awful Dr Orloff in Thailand , obviously. But it's about
eyes instead of skin and other body parts, but with a supernatural twist. Now,
everything is actually quite good until the second hour starts. Before that, a
quite serious horror-drama with some blood and tension and now the zombie/ghost
is outside the lab, trying to get in and their defending themselves with magic
etc, etc. Then something goes terrible wrong. Someone, maybe the producer,
decides that it's enough with this silly horror and introduces us to forty-five
minutes of very broad humour and slapstick. Every scene is about how some funny
guest actor (for example, Lor Tok and the weird-looking Songthong) meets the
ghost, not realizing he's a ghost and comedy occurs. This happens four-five
times, and first of all: without subtitles it's not funny at all, and second:
it's kinda destroys the nice atmosphere that the movie started with.
Thank
heavens the last fifteen minutes goes back to the real revenge of the ghost and
we're treated to a lot of fun and sometimes bloody scenes of ghost-action. Like
in the miserable Jing Jork Phee Sing (1985, starring Sorapong Chatree) the
zombie has the gift of stretching his arms several meters and this guy also can
throw his eyes, when I finally gets them again, and make them hunt down people!
Cool.
Without that comedy in the last hour this would have been a blast. Now it's just a good movie. The VCD is badly cropped, but the picture quality itself is better than usual.
Without that comedy in the last hour this would have been a blast. Now it's just a good movie. The VCD is badly cropped, but the picture quality itself is better than usual.