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Tears of the Black Tiger

Originaltitel: Fah talai jone
  • 2000
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
2967
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Tears of the Black Tiger (2000)
Theatrical Trailer from Miramax
trailer wiedergeben2:26
3 Videos
10 Fotos
ParodieSchwarze KomödieActionKomödieRomanzeWestern

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWith its loud acting style, exuberant sets and stunning shots in pastel colours, this Thai cult film is as much a parody as an homage to the Western and the romantic tearjerker.With its loud acting style, exuberant sets and stunning shots in pastel colours, this Thai cult film is as much a parody as an homage to the Western and the romantic tearjerker.With its loud acting style, exuberant sets and stunning shots in pastel colours, this Thai cult film is as much a parody as an homage to the Western and the romantic tearjerker.

  • Regie
    • Wisit Sasanatieng
  • Drehbuch
    • Wisit Sasanatieng
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Chartchai Ngamsan
    • Stella Malucchi
    • Supakorn Kitsuwon
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    2967
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Wisit Sasanatieng
    • Drehbuch
      • Wisit Sasanatieng
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Chartchai Ngamsan
      • Stella Malucchi
      • Supakorn Kitsuwon
    • 50Benutzerrezensionen
    • 71Kritische Rezensionen
    • 69Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Gewinne & 12 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos3

    Tears of the Black Tiger
    Trailer 2:26
    Tears of the Black Tiger
    Tears of the Black Tiger
    Clip 1:01
    Tears of the Black Tiger
    Tears of the Black Tiger
    Clip 1:01
    Tears of the Black Tiger
    Tears of the Black Tiger
    Clip 1:27
    Tears of the Black Tiger

    Fotos9

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 3
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    Topbesetzung13

    Ändern
    Chartchai Ngamsan
    Chartchai Ngamsan
    • Black Tiger
    Stella Malucchi
    Stella Malucchi
    • Rumpoey
    Supakorn Kitsuwon
    • Mahesuan
    Suwinit Panjamawat
    • Dum (Black Tiger Youth)
    Arawat Ruangvuth
    • Police Captain Kumjorn
    Sombat Metanee
    • Fai
    Pairoj Jaisingha
    • Phya Prasit
    Naiyana Shewanan
    • Rumpoey's maid
    • (as Naiyana Sheewanun)
    Kanchit Kwanpracha
    • Kamnan Dua
    Chamloen Sridang
    • Sergeant Yam
    Nicole Dionne
    Nicole Dionne
    • Rumpoey
    • (Synchronisation)
    Philip Hersh
    Philip Hersh
    • Dum
    • (English version)
    • (Synchronisation)
    Ray Quiroga
    Ray Quiroga
    • Mahasuan
    • Regie
      • Wisit Sasanatieng
    • Drehbuch
      • Wisit Sasanatieng
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen50

    6,92.9K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10sackleywhistle

    One of my top 20 films, just for its sense of fun

    Tears of the Black Tiger is one of those films that works so hard to entertain you, it is hard not to enjoy immensely, if only for its sheer exuberance.

    The story is simple. Dum, the Black Tiger, is the best shot there is. He works for a ragtag group of mercenaries lead by Fai, whose motto is, "If you're against Fai, you die". When they capture the captain of the military group trying to shut them down, Dum has to choose between his allegiance to his men or honouring the wish of his old flame, Rumpooey, who is engaged to the captain. That's about it really, but the story is not the reason to watch this film. Its main appeal lies in its style.

    Shot with the tone of a Western but in the style and colours of Thai theatre, it is beautiful to watch and often hilarious in its tongue-in-cheek over-the-topness. Shootouts are frequent and bloody, yet wholly unrealistic. Yet they are never intended to be. The opening sequence sets the tone perfectly. As Dum and his colleague raid the hideout of traitors to Fai, the film plays a particularly extravagant stunt twice, offering the title card "Did you get that? If not, we'll show it again!" in the middle, playing the same sequence in more detail.

    The set design and colouring of the film is exaggerated and lush, all deep reds and greens. There are frequent musical interludes, but not in the Bollywood style, rather songs which explain the emotional state of certain characters, the high point being the main love song - ridiculously over-sentimental - and the cowboy-esque Bonanza-style riding song, a country and western inspired, cheery melody about loneliness.

    The five main characters - Dum, Rumpooey, Kumjorn, Fai and Mahesuan - are wonderful. Dum is all emotionless precision and repressed feelings, a man of action who hides his deep-down longing for his former love. Rumpooey, the love interest, is quietly hilarious in that she just never seems to do anything, a knowing side-swipe to cheap melodrama of the 50's. Kumjorn is the dashing, slightly pompous good guy that you don't want to win, but don't want to die either. The two best though, are Fai, a classic machine gun and vest bad guy who has the films funniest shot in his first shootout - look out for it, its quite subtle - and Mahesuan, Dum's right-hand man, who has the best evil laugh EVER, using it whenever he gets the chance, also one half of an inspired shootout or two. His duel in the first half hour is also one of the funniest shots for any film fan.

    It is a very violent film, but the kind of violence that is truly comic-book, overly-red blood (think cheap hammer horror), taken to a level of exaggeration which rather than making you gag, just makes you wince and laugh. And that is the point. Some people have said that is just terrible, but it is knowingly terrible. It is never attempting to be anything like high art. And in its badness, it is often beautiful and brilliant.

    The only niggle is that it has a tendency to slow down a little in its lingering, slow shots, but never for more than a couple of minutes in what is only an hour and a half of mickey-taking, action packed hilarity.

    Good looks, good sets, good idea, great fun. 10/10

    Sackley
    bob the moo

    Engaging style and some beautiful moments make up for the fact that substance is secondary here

    Having been in love since a young age, Dum and Rumpoey are destined to be together and arrange to meet and marry. However Dum (aka The Black Tiger) is held up in a large gunfight and misses her. Tragically her father has her married off to a police chief while Dum remains with his gang, run by boss Fai and including his own blood brother Mahesuan. Dum hopes to still find his true love but suspicion from Tai leads to betrayal by Mahesuan and Dum finds fate stacked against him as he tries to reunite with Rumpoey and keep his word of years ago.

    Recently I watched Sin City and one of my criticism of that film was that it seem to be a lot of visual style without a great deal of substance and, although I liked this film more, I could not shake the feeling that the style and homage elements were more important to the director than the story and the characters. With Sin City the homage was noir, with this film it was the Thai films of twenty years ago and a form of hyper-homage to westerns in general. In regards the former we have hammy acting, bright colours and imaginative backdrops. These all work and even viewers unfamiliar with the style of the genre will take something from it because it is still recognisable (to a lesser extent) in more modern Bollywood films (and some Thai movies!). In regards a western, the hyper-violent style will certainly appeal to modern audiences with its comic presentation and bloody set pieces.

    However, as I said, my problem with this film is more that the substance is not quite all it could be. Although the film has some beautifully observed moments, the characters and their emotions are not as well developed as they could have been and I didn't find myself as emotionally involved in the people as I was in the style. The acting is pretty wooden but I think that is deliberate. Specifically Kitsuwon's makeup, facial expressions and hammy laugh all hark back to a different period of making films (like I said – it can still be seen in some Bollywood films) and it is matched by the performances from Ngamsan, Malucchi and Metanee. They are enjoyable in terms of continuing the tone and style set by the director.

    Overall this is an interesting and engaging film, mostly thanks to the homages, visual style and real experience of watching a rather unique film. The substance in regards characters and stories is not all it could have been but the plot is still good enough to keep you interesting. A strange mix of styles and genres it may be but it works well and is worth trying to find despite the inherent weaknesses.
    7zetes

    Too much romantic melodrama makes it drag, but it's worth seeing for the good parts

    Harvey Weinstein famously used to buy up foreign films and then would refuse to distribute them to American theaters, thus reducing competition in the arthouses for the films he actually decided to release. Tears of the Black Tiger was one of those films. Now Magnolia Films got it away from him and has it available. It's a Thai Western, with some of the weirdest and wildest production design to be seen. Unfortunately, it doesn't live up to that amazing trailer that played the art-house circuit back in January. While it certainly is a lot of fun in parts, the pacing is poor and the story gets so bogged down in romantic melodrama that at times it's downright boring. Still, those fun parts make it worth sitting through. When the Sergio Leone-esquire violence begins, it's always entertaining. And it has a couple of the best movie deaths ever.
    8AwesomeWolf

    These cowboys have quite the fashion sense...

    Version: Thai audio, English subtitles (by SBS)

    There's something quite awesome about a movie that's advertised as a musical western that turns out to be a musical western in which the cowboys carry rocket launchers and wear very colourful shirts. Awesome.

    In the rather colourful countryside of the rather colourful modern Thailand, a gang of horse-riding, machine-gun toting, Thai cowboys led the by the colourfully villainous Fai (Sombat Metanee). Dum (Chartchai Ngamsan), also known as the Black Tiger, is a member of Fai's gang, and obviously the fastest shot in all the (colourful) land. Dum is competing with fellow gangster Mahesuan the police captain Kumjorn for the affections of Rumpoey (Stella Malucchi), so naturally this leads to shootouts, exploding brains, and lots of evil laughs. How awesome.

    'Tears of the Black Tiger' seems to be a combination of elements from 'Once Upon a Time in the West' and the 'The Quick and the Dead', only with a lot more comedy and melodrama. And colour. At times it may resemble 'Once Upon a Time in the the West', and then go into Sam Raimi mode during an action sequence, and then go into long scenes developing the melodramatic and colourful love story. Have I mentioned the colour yet? This one colourful movie, and will often induce a visual overload of pinkness. Is that even a word?

    'Tears of the Black Tiger' can go from melodramatic romance scenes, to the cheap violence that you might expect from Sam Raim or an early Peter Jackson movie (read: 'exploding heads') very quickly. I'm pretty sure this film could set a record in that department. Its a funny movie, and the action scenes are generally very exciting. I'm also convinced that the creators of this film took on a bet to discover just how much of the colour pink can be displayed in one movie. I never knew pink-shirted cowboys could be so tough.

    'Tears of the Black Tiger' is generally entertaining. I thought it was a little long, but I think most people should enjoy this - 8/10
    8DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: (DVD) Tears of the Black Tiger (2000)

    I've borrowed this DVD from the library twice before, but never had the chance to watch it, until now. The appeal is actually to see some of Thai director Wisit Sasanatieng's past works, before his up and coming made-in-Singapore flick called Armful. And I've heard some good things about this movie too.

    The story combines two different genres into one, the first being a cowboy western, (set in Thailand no less!) and the usual star-crossed lover romance. Perhaps the novelty of the first genre type is having Thai folks dress up as cowboys, riding on their steed and somehow, becoming the villains as they plunder and kill. Yup, they're not the good guys, against the usual stereotype. Here, the cowboys are bandits, and the good folks are naturally, the cops.

    But amongst all the bad hats (pardon the pun), there's always the hero who's forced by circumstances to join the group. Dum (Chartchai Ngamsan), also known as the notorious Black Tiger, renowned fastest and deadliest draw in all of Thailand, has a childhood sweetheart in Rumpoey (Sttella Malucchi). However, their difference in status (he's the son of a servant, while she, the daughter of the governor) meant that it's a forbidden romance to begin with. Knowing his place in her world, he could only admire from afar, becoming her protector, shielding her from harm (like numerous approaches by lechers and bandits).

    A man gotta do what a man gotta do, and during one of his missions, he failed to meet up with Rumpoey presumably to elope, while she took it as a sign that he didn't want to. Like Romeo and Juliet, she's betrothed to Kumjorn (Arawat Ruangyuth), a police captain captured by Dum's notorious gangster boss Fai (Sombat Metanee). And like all star crossed lovers whose lives are played by Fate, these events start to spin and take on a life of its own, changing the course of our characters lives forever.

    It's a beautifully shot movie, with plenty of pastel colours draping the sets, which at times make you cringe and beg for it to stop. As if to complement its saccharine sweet and sentimental love story, it elevates the movie to a surreal dream like level. The action sequences can be quite cheesy, with the reminiscence of old spaghetti cowboy western gun fights. But the best bits about the film, are the songs. I don't understand Thai, but even if without the subtitles interpreting the lyrics, I thought that they were beautiful enough to accentuate scenes in the movie.

    Perhaps my only gripe about the movie in this version of the DVD, is that the bloody violence had been censored, depriving me the bloody glee of watching the Black Tiger dispatch his opponents with his accuracy. There were scenes where footsoldiers bled by the bucketloads of ketchup, but the crucial one-on-ones were totally censored, and you wouldn't know the nitty gritty details of the death. Truly marred my enjoyment of the movie. What gives?

    Code 3 DVD contains some extras, like Extracts from the Book - Black Tiger's Philosophy and Rumpoey's Guilt, explaining a bit more about the lead characters, Insights into the Film Aesthetic takes a look at the Sala Raw Nang, or "Awaiting the Maiden", the quintessential Thai shelter, and how Rattana Pestonji (indie Thai filmmaker) had influenced the set design, especially the colours. The extras is topped off with a one static screen Director's Inspiration, and the list of awards which this film has won.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      International sales rights to Tears of the Black Tiger were purchased by Fortissimo Films, which marketed a 101-minute "international cut", edited by director Wisit Sasanatieng from the original 110-minute length. The shorter version omits some transitional scenes in order to streamline the pacing of the film. This version was released theatrically in several countries, including France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. Among the deleted scenes are those involving the comic relief character, Sergeant Yam, Rumpoey's engagement to Captain Kumjorn and other transitional scenes. Fortissimo sold the US distribution rights to Miramax Films during the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. Miramax then sent word that it wanted to alter the film. Wisit offered the company an even shorter version than the international cut, but the company refused, cutting 30 minutes out of the film resulting a 81 minute cut. "They didn't allow myself to re-cut it at all", Wisit said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. "They did it by themselves and then sent the tape. And they changed the ending from tragic to happy. They said that in the time after 9/11, nobody would like to see something sad. Altering films was routine for Miramax, at the time headed by Harvey and Bob Weinstein, who defended their actions by saying the films needed editing to make them marketable to American audiences. Other examples were the Miramax releases of Shaolin Soccer and Hero. The Miramax version was screened at the Sundance Film Festival in 2002. The company then shelved the film, fearing it would not do well in a wider release. This was another routine by the Weinsteins, who delayed releases so they could shift potential money-losing films to future fiscal years and ensure they would receive annual bonuses from Miramax's corporate parent, The Walt Disney Company. As Tears of the Black Tiger languished in the Miramax vaults, its cult film status was heightened and it became a "Holy Grail" for film fans. For viewers in the US, the only way to watch it was to purchase the DVD from overseas importers, however some of those versions of the film had also been heavily edited. In late 2006, Magnolia Pictures acquired the film's distribution rights from Miramax. Magnolia screened the original version of the film in a limited release from January to April 2007 in several US cities.
    • Zitate

      Mahesuan: By everything sacred in this world, I, Mahesuan, swear, with the Buddha as my witness, I'll always be true and loyal to my blood brother, Dom, the Black Tiger who saved my life. If I break this oath, may his gun take my life.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Monrak - Magische Liebe (2001)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 9. August 2001 (Singapur)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Thailand
    • Offizieller Standort
      • only in french
    • Sprache
      • Thailändisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Fa talai jone
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Aichi Arts Center
      • Film Bangkok
      • Five Star Production Co. Ltd.
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 75.234 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 7.954 $
      • 14. Jan. 2007
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 138.615 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 50 Min.(110 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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