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In this episode, host Namfon Narumol Choochan speaks with "Mai" Anocha Suwichakornpong, independent filmmaker, producer, founder of Electric Eel Film, and Associate Professor in Film at Columbia University. Anocha shares how films and filmmaking can be a form of resistance by rethinking the boundary between truth and fiction. They discuss how her previous and upcoming features have engaged with the politics of remembering and forgetting of state violence in Thai history. The conversation also delves into Before It Gets Dark, her most renowned feature, and what the Thammasat Massacre means to her on a personal level.
Lightning round: 3:01
Research and Lecture Summary: 7:36
Advice for researchers and recommendations: 41:24
The music on the podcast is from "14 Strings!", a Filipino style Rondalla group established in Cornell University. Check them out here.
Produced by Adam Farihin, Neen Yada Tangcharoenmonkong and Cecilia Liu
By The Southeast Asia Program at Cornell University5
77 ratings
In this episode, host Namfon Narumol Choochan speaks with "Mai" Anocha Suwichakornpong, independent filmmaker, producer, founder of Electric Eel Film, and Associate Professor in Film at Columbia University. Anocha shares how films and filmmaking can be a form of resistance by rethinking the boundary between truth and fiction. They discuss how her previous and upcoming features have engaged with the politics of remembering and forgetting of state violence in Thai history. The conversation also delves into Before It Gets Dark, her most renowned feature, and what the Thammasat Massacre means to her on a personal level.
Lightning round: 3:01
Research and Lecture Summary: 7:36
Advice for researchers and recommendations: 41:24
The music on the podcast is from "14 Strings!", a Filipino style Rondalla group established in Cornell University. Check them out here.
Produced by Adam Farihin, Neen Yada Tangcharoenmonkong and Cecilia Liu

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