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Buffalo Girls is a documentary film about two eight-year-old Thai girls who engage in professional Muay Thai boxing in rural Thailand. The film was directed by Todd Kellstein and produced by Lanette Phillips and Jonathon Ker. It had its World Premiere at the Slamdance Film Festival on January 22, 2012. [1]
The DVD for region 3 was released in Thailand by MVD Company Limited on 10 May 2011. [2] The region-free Blu-ray with subtitles in English, French, Spanish, and Portuguese was released by Canon Yuri Films on 1 January 2012. [3] The film was released as VOD on Netflix in the United States and United Kingdom on 5 December 2018. [4] [5]
Fan Chan (Thai: แฟนฉัน, English: My Girl) is a 2003 Thai coming-of-age romance comedy film directed by Vitcha Gojiew, Songyos Sugmakanan, Nithiwat Tharathorn, Witthaya Thongyooyong, Anusorn Trisirikasem, and Komgrit Triwimol starring Charlie Trairat and Focus Jirakul and distributed by Hub Ho Hin Tai Entertainment GMM Pictures. the film following about a nostalgic look back at the ...
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Hollywood has played an important role in the development of Thailand's film industry. One of the first feature films made in Thailand, 1923's Miss Suwanna of Siam, was a Hollywood co-production, made with the royal assistance of King Vajiravudh, who gave the production free use of his 52 automobiles, 600 horses, use of the Royal Thai Navy, the Grand Palace, the railways, the rice mills, rice ...
During the Vietnam War, Thailand was a popular destination for American soldiers on their R&R leave. [6] Although the soldiers preferred women rather than young girls, the sex industry in Thailand developed faster than ever before. [6] There were five US bases in Thailand, each housing up to 50,000 troops. [1]
This is the only DVD of the director's cut that has English subtitles on both the film and the extras, except the Making Of which doesn't have any subtitles. [22] All Thailand editions mentioned above are now out of print. A budget-price one disc version was released in 2009, [23] accompanied by a two disc version of the director's cut. [24]
Featuring a risqué sex scene involving a Burmese man and a Thai woman in the jungle, the movie received only limited screenings in Thailand and a Thai-released DVD of the film was censored. [24] Apichatpong's next film, Tropical Malady , featuring a gay romance between an army soldier and a country guy, was a jury-prize winner at Cannes.