Chuck Stephens on the Set of "Citizen Dog"

Chuck Stephens March 22, 2006

From my vantage in the cramped backseat of a Toyota minivan that’s serving the talent wagon for a deliriously over-designed new love story entitled "Citizen Dog" – the second feature film by my friend and director, Wisit Sasanatieng, one of Thailand’s most promising young cinematic mavericks – I watch as the insect dawn over Muang Thong Thani begins to leech away. A planned satellite suburb of Bangkok whose name translates as "Golden City" – nevermind that this would-be bedroom community’s developers went bust just before their "miracle mile" of modern highrise condos were completed – Muang Thong Thani is, on most days, as quiet and uninhabited as the dark side of the moon.

But on this sooty, sweat-stained March morning in 2004, the ghost-city’s sidewalks are strangely bustling with an assortment of men, women, and children all identically dressed in powder-blue maid’s uniforms; in its streets, a protest rally surges past a pair of love-struck country kids still dazed by the chaos of this make-believe modern metropolis; and in an alleyway nearby, a zealous beat-cop is readying to pursue a conspicuously Western-featured street-vendor of suspicious reading materials who’s been blocking shopper’s ways. And in these last few moments of pre-celebrity mindfulness before I step before Wisit’s camera to make my big-screen debut as the shifty-eyed farang who may or may not hold the secret to "Citizen Dog"‘s heroine’s romantic dreams, I struggle to reassure myself of two ineluctable things: 1) that everything changes, or can at least be made to appear that way, and 2), that at least I am dressed accordingly – in a billowing tie-dye shirt tinted an altogether unseemly shade of chartreuse, and a pair of slightly-too-small white Converse hightops which are definitely not my own.

- Chuck Stephens, San Francisco Bay Guardian film critic, Bangkok movie star.

0
  • Nov 3, 2011
    Thursday

    Essential SF: Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman

    With riveting characters, cascading revelations and momentous breakthroughs, Epstein and Friedman’s work paved the way for contemporary documentary practice.

  • Nov 2, 2011
    Wednesday

    Essential SF: Susan Gerhard

    Susan Gerhard talks copy, critics and the 'there' we have here.

  • Oct 31, 2011
    Monday

    Essential SF: Karen Larsen

    Universally warm sentiment is attached to the Bay Area's hardest working indie/art film publicist.

  • Oct 28, 2011
    Friday

    Joshua Moore, on Location

    Filmmaker and programmer Moore talks process, offers perspective on his debut feature and Cinema by the Bay opener, ‘I Think It’s Raining.’

  • Oct 26, 2011
    Wednesday

    Essential SF: Canyon Cinema

    For 50 years, Canyon Cinema has provided crucial support for a fertile avant-garde film scene.

  • Oct 24, 2011
    Monday

    Signs of the Times

    Director Mina T. Son talks about the creation of ‘Making Noise in Silence,’ screening the United Nations Association Film Festival this week.

  • Oct 20, 2011
    Thursday

    Children’s Film Festival Moves in and out of Shadows

    Without marketing tie-ins, plastic toys or corn-syrup confections, a children’s film festival brings energy to the screen.

  • Oct 19, 2011
    Wednesday

    Essential SF: Irving Saraf and Allie Light

    Saraf and Light's work is marked by an unwavering appreciation for underdogs and outsiders.


previousnext

previousnext