A mysterious videotape turns a movie lover into a cinematic sleuth.
Thirty-two-year-old Supot Yongjaiyut lives a quiet life in 1996 Bangkok, working as a postman for the Royal Thai Mail Service and spending the rest of his waking hours at his best friend Ali’s video rental store. The two men, who share an occasionally combative relationship and an omnivorous passion for cinema, watch movies together every night, though Supot’s pessimistic temperament prevented him from pursuing a career in the film industry. One evening, the pair is watching and bickering over The Big Sleep when a crusty homeless man called Woot disrupts their viewing with an offer to sell them a box of old videos. They reject his offer and shoo him away, but he leaves behind a heap of tapes anyway. Among these are several European classics and one tape enigmatically titled Bangkok 2010. The film is so unexpectedly brilliant and provocative that Supot becomes fixated on it, writing down the names of the creative staff so that he can research and maybe locate them. He becomes particularly obsessed with the reclusive leading lady, Siriluk, and even begins a skittish correspondence with her. Definitely not a whodunit, the tale still provides ample suspense, as Supot undertakes a risky adventure that profoundly changes him. Cinephiles will especially enjoy the wide-ranging film trivia and commentary shared by the duo, infused with the author’s characteristic drollery and interspersed with chunks of the film’s screenplay. Cotterill explores with empathy and insight the power of movies to enrich and even guide our lives.
An offbeat, uplifting thriller every movie lover will cherish.