Tears of the Black Tiger (Thai: ฟ้าทะลายโจร, or
Fah talai jone, literally, "the heavens strike the thief") is a 2000
Thai western film written and directed by
Wisit Sasanatieng. The story of a tragic romance between Dum, a fatalistic, working-class hero, who has become an outlaw, and Rumpoey, the upper-class daughter of a
provincial governor, it is equal parts homage to and parody of Thai
action films and romantic melodramas of the 1950s and 1960s.
The film was the first from Thailand to be selected for competition at the Cannes Film Festival,[1][2] where it was critically hailed.[3][4] It
was screened at several other film festivals in 2001 and 2002, including the Vancouver International Film Festival, where it won the Dragons and Tigers Awards
for Best New Director.[5]
It also won many awards in Thailand for production and costume design, special effects and soundtrack.
Critics have noted the film's stylized use of color and conspicuous violence, and have compared it to the revisionist westerns of Sergio Leone and Sam Peckinpah.[3] It
has also been compared to the works of such directors as Douglas Sirk, John Woo, Jean-Luc Goddard, Sam
Raimi and Quentin Tarantino.[4][6][7]
Miramax Films purchased the film for distribution in the United States, but changed the ending and then shelved it indefinitely. In 2006, the distribution rights
were obtained by Magnolia Pictures, which screened the original version of the film in
a limited release from January to April 2007 in several US cities.[8]
Plot
A young woman waits in the rain under an ornate gazebo in a lotus pond. She carries with her a photo of the man she is waiting for.
The man, whose name is Dum, is with another gunman named Mahesuan. Dressed all in black and
wearing a cowboy hat, Dum enters a house and fires his pistol. The bullet ricochets around before it burrows into a man's forehead. A red title card then flashes up and says: "Did you
catch that? If not, we'll play it again!" And the shot is replayed in slow motion, showing the bullet bouncing off items in a
Rube Goldberg fashion.
Dum and Mahesuan engage in a shootout.
Dum then rushes off, galloping his horse across the plain. However, by the time he reaches the gazebo, the woman, whose name
is Rumpoey, is gone. She has returned home, where she is to be engaged to Police Captain Kumjorn in a marriage arranged by her father, the provincial
governor.
Mahesuan is bitter about his status as a sidekick to Dum. He was the best gunman in the
outlaw gang headed by the brutal Fai, until Dum came along. Eager to settle the score, Mahesuan goes looking for Dum and finds
him playing a harmonica. Mahesuan knocks it out of Dum's hand and baits him into a
gunfight. The quick-drawing Dum fires first, but Mahesuan is not injured. However, a dead snake
drops from an overhanging tree branch onto Mahesuan's cowboy hat. Dum killed the venomous snake, saving Mahesuan's life.
Dum then thinks back to his childhood 10 years ago during the Second World War, when
Rumpoey and her father left the city to stay on Dum's father's small farm in rural Thailand.
Rumpoey is a demanding girl. She smashes a bamboo flute that Dum is playing and demands that he take her on a boat ride in the
lotus pond. They visit the gazebo, or sala in Thai language, and it is called "Sala
Awaiting the Maiden." Dum says a woodcutter built it to await a wealthy family's daughter whom he had fallen in love with.
However, the maiden was prevented from meeting the woodcutter, so she hung herself. Rumpoey is
touched by the story.
Dum and Rumpoey as children, at Sala Awaiting the Maiden.
On the way home, they collide with a boat carrying three boys, who taunt Rumpoey. Dum defends Rumpoey, is struck with an oar
and then their boat overturns. He rescues Rumpoey but is late in coming home. So he is punished by his father, who lashes the
boy's back with a rattan cane. Rumpoey, feeling sorry for getting Dum into trouble, buys him a harmonica to replace the flute she
broke.
Shifting back to present time, Dum and Mahesuan ride to an old Buddhist temple, where they
swear a blood oath in front of the Buddha statue.
Meanwhile, Captain Kumjorn is eager to bring law and order to the wild west of
Suphanburi Province. In an attack on Fai’s hide-out, the police forces seem to be
gaining the upper hand. But then Dum and Mahesuan arrive on a cliff overlooking the battle and use grenade launchers to decimate the police. Kumjorn is captured, and Dum is ordered by Fai to
execute him. Kumjorn pleads with Dum to tell his fiancée of his fate, and he pulls out a
framed photo of his beloved. Dum is stunned to see a photo of Rumpoey. Mahesuan enters to find Kumjorn gone and Dum with a knife
in his chest.
Captain Kumjorn visits Rumpoey in the governor's mansion.
As Dum's wound is being treated, he thinks back to one year ago, when he was a university student in Bangkok, where he became re-acquainted with Rumpoey. Dum pleads with her to leave him alone, reasoning that they
are from different social classes and are fated to never be together. Later, Rumpoey is
attacked by a gang of male students, the same boys from her childhood boat accident. Dum comes to her rescue but ends up
expelled. Rumpoey finds Dum walking, and offers to give him a ride in her car. She
then instructs her driver to take them to a nearby beach. Dum and Rumpoey confide their love for each other, and they agree to
meet a year later at Sala Awaiting the Maiden.
However, Dum arrives at home and finds his father murdered. He takes his father’s rifle, tracks the killers and shoots some of them. With one bullet left, he turns the gun on himself, but is
stopped by Fai, who has ridden up with his horsemen. Fai recognizes the rifle, saying he had given it to Dum’s father years
before. Fai then hands Dum a pistol and tells him to finish the job of killing the men who murdered his father. Dum is now an
outlaw.
Shifting back to the present, where it is the night before Rumpoey's wedding to Kumjorn, she tries to hang herself, but is stopped by her maid. Fai, meanwhile, plans to attack the governor's mansion, and Mahesuan,
suspecting that Dum intentionally let Kumjorn go free, betrays Dum. A gun battle ensues, but Dum escapes.
Dum, dressed in a white suit, appears at the wedding and warns Kumjorn of Fai's plans to
attack. Kumjorn, however, wants to shoot the man he knows as the "Black Tiger" and is his rival for Rumpoey's affection. Fai's
men attack and Mahesuan breaks into the mansion, where he discovers Rumpoey, and knocks her unconscious. Mahesuan is carrying
Rumpoey away when he meets Dum and demands a rematch gunfight. As a raindrop drips through a hole in the brim of Mahesuan's hat,
Dum fires and the bullet rips through Mahesuan's teeth.
Dum, next confronted by Kumjorn, reaches into his pocket. Kumjorn, believing that he is reaching for his gun, shoots Dum. But
Dum was only reaching for the photograph of Rumpoey that Kumjorn had once carried. As Dum lays dying in the rain with Rumpoey
sobbing over him, some of Dum's words from earlier are narrated again – that life is
suffering, punctuated only by a never-ending search for happy moments.
Veteran Thai actor Sombat Metanee portrays the villain Fai.
Cast
Production
Origins
While Tears of the Black Tiger has been compared to the revisionist
westerns of Sam Peckinpah and Sergio
Leone,[3][9] director Wisit Sasanatieng drew on many Thai cultural influences
in the creation of the film, including Thai films of the 1950s made by pioneering
director Rattana Pestonji, whose films Wisit had viewed in screenings at the Thailand
National Film Archive.
"Whenever the Film Archive screened an old film, I'd be there. Usually, I'd be the only one there," Wisit said in an interview
at the Vancouver International Film Festival in 2000. "Most
Thai audiences dislike Thai movies, especially
the old ones, which they consider nam nao," he said, using the Thai language
euphemism for the old films, which are viewed as stagnant and cliched. Literally, nam
nao means "stinky water."[10]
"What I saw in them was a way to stay true to the spirit of those old styles of Thai filmmaking, as well as a way to make them
new again. And none of the older generation of filmmakers impressed me more than Rattana
Pestonji."[10]
In addition to Rattana's 1950s and 1960s drama films, Tears of the Black Tiger draws on 1960s and 1970s Thai action
cinema, derisively termed by critics as raberd poa, khaow pao kratom ("bomb the mountain, burn the huts") films. Among the
stars from this era were Mitr Chaibancha and Sombat
Metanee, who co-stars as gang leader Fai.[11] Wisit has acknowledged the influence of Leone's Spaghetti Westerns but has said, "mine is 'Tom Yum Goong cowboys'
because at one time cowboys were very popular in Thai films as you can see in Mitr Chaibancha's films."[12]
Still more influences include the novels of Thai humorist Por Intharapalit and an
old Thai pop ballad, "Fon Sang Fah" ("When the Rain Bids the Sky Farewell"). "I do love those 'rain' songs. I kept picturing a
beautiful frame of two guys shooting each other in the rain. And that sparked it all," Wisit said in an interview for the film's
production notes.[12] Initially
Fon Sang Fah was to be the title of the film, but eventually Fah talai jone (literally "the heavens strike the
thief") was chosen because the name has different meanings depending on the context. In addition to being the Thai name for an
herb, Andrographis paniculata, Fah talai jone "can convey either a sense
of obsoleteness or the feel of great chic," the director said.[12] "In terms of the film it refers to
predestination, in which most Thais believe. To put it frankly, the main reason is simply
because I liked the name." [12]
Production design, lighting, processing
Tears of the Black Tiger was the directorial debut for Wisit, who had previously penned the screenplays for the 1950s-set teenage gangster tale Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters and the historical Thai ghost legend,
Nang Nak, both directed by Nonzee Nimibutr, who
produced Tears of the Black Tiger. Production design was by Ek Iemchuen, a classmate of Wisit's from Silpakorn University who also worked on Nang Nak and Dang Bireley's as well as the
2001 period drama, Jan Dara, also by Nonzee.[13]
Mahesuan and Dum face off in a gunfight in front of a painted background.
The production designs reflects traditional aspects of Thai culture. For example,
the first gun battle between Mahesuan and Dum is set on what is obviously a sound stage with
a painted backdrop, a setting that is similar to likay, a Thai form of folk opera.
"I wanted the audience to feel like they're reading a novel with moving illustrations," Wisit said. "It's pure imagination and
completely unrealistic. I wanted to try and go back to our roots. I wanted to make a link between the traditional and the
contemporary in our own style."[14]
Over-saturated colors were used to reflect
scenes of rural Thailand, which the director saw as bright and colorful. Walls on the sets and locations were painted pink or
green, and lighting was used to achieve the saturation. The film was treated in the
color grading process by transferring it to digital Betacam tape and then back to 35 mm film.[14] Oxide Pang, working as a
telecine colorist, won a special effects award in Thailand for his work.[15]
Wisit was able to experiment with the set design and lighting effects in a commercial he directed for Wrangler Jeans, which featured the film's leading man, Chartchai Ngamsan, as a boxer.[16]
Casting and promotion
Most of the cast were relative newcomers, whom the director said he chose because he felt established stars would not be able
to handle the old-style dialog. Chartchai Ngamsan and Supakorn Kitsuwon had previously had supporting roles in Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters. Italian-born,
Thailand-raised model and actress Stella Malucchi was acting in a music video in
Bangkok, which was noticed on television by Wisit. He then sought out Malucchi, saying he thought she had the right look for the
part of Rumpoey.[10][17] He told her later she reminded him of
Elizabeth Taylor.[17] Through costuming and makeup, Malucchi, a "plain farang", in
the words of Wisit,[12] was
transformed into the daughter of a Thai noble family. There are experienced actors in the cast as well, including Sombat Metanee
and Naiyana Sheewanun, who worked in the era of Thai filmmaking that Wisit was trying to recreate.
Old-style ways of promoting the film were used. In the 1950s, films in Thailand were promoted with serial novels and radio dramas. Wisit and his wife Siripan Techajindawong, writing under the pen name Koynuch, wrote some chapters that were
published for a Fah talai jone book after the film was released. A radio version of Fah talai jone was performed
while the film was in cinemas in Thailand. Wisit designed movie posters and
print ads that emulated the style of Thai film posters from the 1950s and 1960s.[11][18]
Reception
For film festivals,
Tears of the Black Tiger has been marketed as a "spicy Thai western".
Festivals and awards
Tears of the Black Tiger opened on September 28, 2000, in a wide release for Thai cinemas.[19] The film was a flop at the domestic box
office,[10][20] but it received several awards. At the Thailand National Film Association Awards, the film won best costume design
for Chaiwichit Somboon.[21] The
Bangkok Critics Assembly awarded Ek Iamchuen for best artistic design,
Sombat Metanee for best supporting actor and Amornbhong Methakunavudh for best film
score. The Entertainment News Reporters Association of Thailand gave Phra
Suraswadee, or "Golden Doll", prizes to lyricist Siriphan Techajindawong and arranger Sunthorn Yodseethong for the song
"Kamsuanjan" ("The Moon Lament"), Ek Iemchuen for best art direction and telecine colorist
Oxide Pang for best special effects.[15] Tears of the Black Tiger was referenced in another Thai film,
Monrak Transistor, in 2001. The comedy by
director Pen-ek Ratanaruang starred Supakorn
Kitsuwon, who co-starred in Tears as Mahesuan. At the 2006 Bangkok International Film Festival, Tears of the Black Tiger was
screened as part of a tribute to Sombat Metanee, who portrays the outlaw leader, Fai.[22]
The film's North American premiere was on October 5,
2000 at the Vancouver International Film
Festival, where it won the Dragons and Tigers Award for best new director.[5] It was the first Thai film to be screened at the Cannes Film Festival, where it was in the Un Certain
Regard competition in May 2001.[1][2] At the Gijón International Film
Festival in 2001, it won the best art direction award,[21] and at the fifth Puchon International Fantastic Film
Festival it won a jury prize.[23] Other festival appearances included the Seattle International Film Festival and Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2001 and the Sundance Film Festival, International
Film Festival Rotterdam, Deauville Asian Film Festival and
Moscow International Film Festival in 2002.[24]
Critical reception
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 77% fresh rating, based on 57 reviews, with an 88%
"Cream of the Crop" rating.[25] On Metacritic, it has a score of 69/100, based on
19 reviews, for a "generally favorable" rating.[26] Critics were "wowed" by the film at the Cannes Film
Festival, according to Peter Bradshaw of The
Guardian, who termed the film a "stir-fry horse opera [and an] uproarious
high-camp cowboy drama."[3]
Philip French of The Observer found
parallels to Once Upon a Time in the West, particularly between the
anti-hero Dum and Charles Bronson's harmonica-playing
character. He also saw similarities to the deliberately artificial action of Sam Raimi's
The Quick and the Dead. He said the "outlandishly painted
backdrops and garish acid colors" reminded him of old Asian movie posters. "The overall effect is hallucinatory, as if we're
experiencing someone else's druggy dream."[27]
Chuck Stephens, writing for Film Comment, said the blend of 1970s Thai action
cinema and the Spaghetti Westerns of Sergio
Leone results in a "hybrid of hybrids ... a Pad Thai western where cowboys covet
machine guns and swear blood
oaths to one another under the shadow of an impassive Buddha.[10]
The BBC's Jason Korsner criticized the film for its "deliberately labored plot," which he said
was "offset by some fascinating action sequences, including gunfights which would make Tarantino jealous."[6]
However, Sight & Sound magazine's Edward Buscombe called the action
"tame by contemporary Hollywood standards" but said it was "curiously
seductive" because of its colorful imagery. Buscombe, as well as Philip French, remarked how Tears of the Black Tiger
contrasted with another Asian cinema export to the West that year: the balletic
martial arts film, Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon.[9]
David Edelstein of New York
Magazine compared the film to 1940s low-budget westerns of Lash La Rue,
Douglas Sirk melodramas, the heroic bloodshed
films of John Woo and George A. Romero's gore-filled
horror films. "It’s no buried postmodern masterpiece, but it certainly is a jaw-dropper: a delirium-inducing crash course in
international trash," Edelstein wrote.[4]
A. O. Scott of The New York Times
commented on the stoic, macho posturing of Chartchai Ngamsan's Dum, and the underlying homoeroticism of
the character's relationship with Mahesuan, portrayed by Supakorn Kitsuwon. "[Rumpoey]
may be the love of Dum’s life, but there is far more heat and intimacy in his relationship with Mahesuan."[28]
Elizabeth Weitzman of the New York Daily News noted the film's appeal as
a camp film and as a cult film, saying "the best
B-movies are both."[29]
Distribution
Purchase by Miramax, alternate versions
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.[30] This version was released theatrically in several countries, including France, the Netherlands and the United
Kingdom.[24]
Among the deleted scenes are those involving the comic relief character, Sergeant Yam,
Rumpoey's engagement to Captain Kumjorn and other transitional scenes.[31]
Fortissimo sold the US distribution rights to Miramax
Films during the 2001 Cannes Film Festival.[32] 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. "They didn't allow me to re-cut it at all," Wisit said in an
interview with the Los Angeles Times. "They did it by themselves and then sent me 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."[30][33]
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. "I'm not cutting for fun," Harvey Weinstein said in
an interview. "I'm cutting for the shit to work. All my life I served one master: the film. I love movies."[34]
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.[30]
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.[35]
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.[8][29][36][37] 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.[7][31]
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.[8][38][39]
DVD releases
The original version of the film, with English subtitles, was released on DVD in Thailand by Digital Right, and it is out of
print. A Singaporean Region 3 release, also with English subtitles, had scenes involving
graphic violence cut. The Region 2 release, marketed in Europe by Pathé and in Region 4 by Madman Entertainment is the 101-minute
"international cut".[31]
The first DVD release for Region 1 was on April 24, 2007 by Magnolia Pictures,
which acquired the original, uncut version of the film.[8][40]
Soundtrack
Just as Tears of the Black Tiger has been compared to the Spaghetti Westerns
of director Sergio Leone, the music in the film has been likened to the scores
Ennio Morricone composed for Leone's films.[9]
However, the score is sourced from the types of big band jazz
and pop music sounds that were heard in Thailand in
the 1940s and 1950s. Among the songs is the 1940s Thai pop ballad, "Fon Sang Fah" ("When the Rain Bids the Sky
Farewell").[12] There is also
"Mercy," composed by 1940s Thai bandleader and jazz violinist Eua Sunthornsanan, which
features whimsical fiddle playing and whistling. However, the
lyrics to the song, written by Leud Prasomsap, offer a contrast to the mood evoked by the jaunty tune:
- What a miserable life, so alone
- No one cares for me
- I'm so alone, so lonesome I could die.[41]
A traditional song, "Kamsuanjan" ("The Moon Lament"), was arranged with new lyrics by Wisit's wife, Siripan Techajindawong. She and arranger Sunthorn Yodseethong won the Phra Suraswadee
("Golden Doll") prize for best song from the Entertainment News Reporters Association of Thailand.[15]
Track listing
A soundtrack CD was issued around the time the film was released. The first half of the CD is songs with vocals. The songs are
then repeated as instrumentals.
- "Mercy" – composed by Leud Prasomsap and Eua Sunthornsanan); performed by Veera
Bamrungsri (3:01)
- "Kamsuanjan" ("The Moon Lament") – traditional, lyrics by Wisit Sasanatieng and
Siripan Techajindawong; performed by Yaowaret Methakhunnawut (3:23)
- "Fon Sang Fah" ("When the Rain Bid the Sky Farewell") – composed by Salai Krailoed and Suthin Thesarak; performed by Kamonwan
Thasanon (2:49)
- "Destiny" – composed by Kaew Achariyakun and Wet Sunthonjamon; performed by Niwat Charoenmit (2:55)
- "Beautiful Beach" – composed by Sakon Mitranon and Sanae Komarachun; performed by Kamonwan Thasanon (3:10)
- "Splendid Night Sky" – composed by Kaew Achariyakun and Eua Sunthornsanan; performed by Yaowaret Mathakhunnawut (3:04)
- "Mercy" – composed by Eua Sunthornsanan (3:01)
- "Kamsuanjan" ("The Moon Lament") – traditional (3:24)
- "Fon Sang Fah" ("When the Rain Bid the Sky Farewell") – composed by Suthin Thesarak (2:51)
- "Destiny" – composed by Wet Sunthonjamon (2:55)
- "Beautiful Beach" – composed by Sanae Komarachun (3:11)
- "Splendid Night Sky" – composed by Eua Sunthornsanan (3:04)
- "Horse Riding" (1:04)[42]
References and notes
- ^ a b Un
certain regard > Fah Talai Jone. Cannes 2001. Cannes Film Festival. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b Cannes Film Festival. Search result, Thailand. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b c d Bradshaw, Peter (2001-08-24).
Guardian Unlimited film reviews. The Guardian. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b c
Edelstein, David (2007-01-15). Thai cowboys with rockets. New York Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b 19th Vancouver
International Film Festival Report. Senses of Cinema. Retrieved on 2006-12-16.
- ^ a b Korsner, Jason (2001-08-23). Tears of
the Black Tiger (Fah talai jone). BBC. Retrieved on 2007-01-10.
- ^ a b Bourne, Christopher (2007). Review: Tears of the Black Tiger.
Meniscus Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^ a b c d Goldstein, Greg (2006-11-28). Magnolia cages 'Tiger' in U.S.. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b c Buscombe,
Edward (2001-08). Way Out
East. Sight & Sound. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b c d e Stephens, Chuck
(May 2001). Tears
of the Black Tiger – Review. Film Comment. Retrieved on 2007-02-09.
- ^ a b Rayns, Tony (2001-03-11). Dinosaur get out!.
Cinemas Online. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b c d e f Wisit Sasanatieng interview (txt). Thai Movies (2001). Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ Production notes (doc).
Press kit. Magnolia Pictures. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b Roddick, Nick (2001-05). Keep watching the
Thais. Preview Online. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b c
Film
Bangkok. Mirror of official site at Asia.Travel.ru. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ Sasanatieng,
Wisit. Wrangler
Jeans commercial (zip). Film Factory. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b Stella Malucchi on Tears of the Black Tiger. Channel 4. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ Film
Fact. Channel 4. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ Tears of the Black
Tiger synopsis. MovieSeer. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
- ^ Na Talang, Jeerawat (2007-01-16). King Naresuan
should be great. The Nation (Thailand). Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ a b Awards for Fah talai jone. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^
Veteran Actor Sombat Metanee to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award (PDF). 2006 Bangkok International Film Festival
(2006-01-19). Retrieved on 2006-11-30.
- ^ Puchon Choice Feature. Fifth Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival. Retrieved on
2006-12-16.
- ^ a b Release dates for Fah talai jone. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^ Tears of the Black Tiger.
Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2007-08-03.
- ^ Tears of the Black Tiger.
Metacritic. Retrieved on 2007-03-15.
- ^ French,
Philip (2001-08-26). Paint your dragon, cowboy. The Observer. Retrieved on 2007-01-10.
- ^ Scott, A. O. (2007-01-12).
Gun-slinging cowboys in colorful Thailand. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2007-01-12.
- ^ a b Weitzman, Elizabeth (2007-01-12). Wild, wild East. New York Daily News. Retrieved on 2007-01-13.
- ^ a b c Lim, Dennis (2007-03-02).
When Miramax ate a 'Tiger'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2007-03-02.
- ^ a b c Tears of
the Black Tiger. DVD comparisons. DVD Talk (2005-02-23). Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^ Miramax Grabs Sasanatieng's 'Tears of
the Black Tiger'. IndieWire. Retrieved on 2006-12-16.
- ^ TIFF Report: Wisit Sasanatieng talks Citizen Dog'. Twitchfilm (2005-09-17). Retrieved
on 2007-01-11.
- ^ Mason, Ian Garrick (2004-10-11). When Harvey met Mickey. New
Statesman. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^ Epstein, Edward Jay (2005-10-10). The great illusionist. Slate. Retrieved on
2007-01-11.
- ^ Brown, Chris (2004-01-25). Tears of the Black
Tiger. Opuszine. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^ How about a Thai cult
film???. Fixins Entertainment (2005-04-10). Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^ Revenge of the Tears of the Black Tiger. Kaiju Shakedown. Retrieved on 2007-08-08.
- ^ Wisit
Sasanatieng’s Tears of the Black Tiger gets a USA release on January 12, 2007. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2006-12-17.
- ^ The Tiger hits DVD April 24th. Twitchfilm.net (2007-02-16). Retrieved on 2007-02-17.
- ^ Sasanatieng, Wisit, dir. Fah talai Jone (English subtitles)
[DVD]. Thailand: Digital Right.
- ^ Soundtrack
track listing. Soundtrack Collector. Retrieved on 2006-12-14.
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