Friday, June 19, 2009

The Coffin

Cast: Karen Mok, Ananda Everingham, Napakpapha Nakpasitte, Andrew Lin, Suchao Pongwilai, Tassawan Seneewongse, Aki Shibuya; Director: Ekachai Uekrongtham; Directors: Mickey M. Bonura, Daniel Ingraham; Producer: Shawn Ramagos; Screenwriters: Mickey M. Bonura, Daniel Ingaraham; Music: Marco Werba; Editor: Kristopher Hoffman; Genre: Horror; Cinematography: Kristopher Hoffman; Distributor: Scorpio East Pictures, MediaCorp Raintree Pictures & Cathay-Keris Films: Location: Thailand; Running Time: 90 min.;

Technical Assessment: 3
Moral Assessment: 2.5
CINEMA Rating: For mature viewers 18 and above

Two people journey to Thailand to participate in a horrifying ritual to save one’s self or one’s beloved. Chris‘s (Ananda Everingdam) is a claustrophobic architect whose fiancé, Mariko, is dying slowly while Sue (Karen Mok) is a health conscious nutritionist who just learned she has cancer. After participating in the Thai ritual, they momentarily experience miracles as Mariko awakens and Sue escapes a near death accident and is declared cancer-free. However, the happiness is short lived as a woman and her baby haunt Chris, and Sue’s fiancé dies but continues to stay with her. Soon they find themselves with a paranormal professor as they frantically try to exorcise the ghosts and reverse their luck before another misfortunate befalls on them.
For a horror film, The Coffin is exquisite as it features beautiful Thailand with its magnificent century old temples and historic cemeteries. The production design is cinematically eerie with scenes like hundred of coffins arranged around a giant Buddha and a closet stretching endlessly with mirrors facings each other on both sides. The horror is brilliant as it delivers a shock right after one has relaxed with the seemingly harmless settings. The performances are raw and vulnerable, drawing the audience with the characters’ lives and emotions. However, the script and storyline fail to develop seamlessly with a few loose ends here and there. The efforts to add drama at the end is weak and clichéd. Overall, the movie is thrilling enough to hold the audience for an hour and half at the edge of their seats.
The movie is inspired by a controversial north eastern Thai ceremony where fate and karma are merely elements of ritual as disturbing as lying in a coffin. The movie, though, takes this a step further and says the world is merely balanced by good and bad karmas where receiving a good fortune must necessarily bring on a misfortune to somebody else. As much as we would understand how hopeless and helpless people cling on to any prospect of salvation, we must also be reminded that the best piece of hope is one’s inner strength that comes from one’s fervent prayers. As Catholics, we throw up our hands and resign to the will of the Almighty but we also do so with a conscious desire to participate in the sufferings and offerings of the Body of Christ. We do not rely on karma but depend on the mercy and blessing of our Creator. And while doing so, we also employ all means humanly possible to alleviate and solve our problems and concerns. We need to emphasize the value of prayer and self-reliance instead of the quick fixes and easy way out.