The Philippine Star

When brilliance turns into scam

- BY PABLO A. TARIMAN

Movies about cheating in school are dime a dozen, especially when dealing with high school life.

They are often treated in comic ways just to show that young people can commit assorted shenanigan­s. Part of growing up, they say. But in the Thai film Bad Genius directed by Nattawut Poonpiriya, the school caper turns serious and becomes a pulse-pounding thriller of chilling proportion.

Straight A student Chutimon Chuengchar­oensukying enters a school she doesn’t really like but poor father thinks her daughter’s exemplary good grades deserve a better learning environmen­t.

The father (Thaneth Warakuklnu­kroh) is a gentle foil to the daughter’s scheme that has evolved into a big money-earning business enterprise. Her father believes in preserving dignity over big deposits in a bank. He is the father figure with boundless moral and financial support for her brilliant daughter.

Against the background of her daughter’s shenanigan­s, the father represents old world virtues in an age of millennial mindset.

But as the story goes, the genius of a daughter finds out she can earn oodles of money by helping schoolmate­s get a good grade by, well, cheating.

But this is no ordinary story of cheating.

The genius even uses believable piano lessons involving popular piano concertos as Morse Code for cheaters.

The pencils used for exams have intricate, fool-proof qualities.

Then she goes internatio­nal as she plans an overseas cheating scheme for schoolmate­s aiming to pass entrance tests in internatio­nal schools.

Here, the film captures its audiences with the sheer genius with which the plan is devised.

But as they say, bad things never really last. The authoritie­s catch up with the planners and executione­rs, and they come to terms with their evil side.

The actor playing the genius is a good one and she proves to be worthy of the evil scheme of her charac- ter. She looks almost insensitiv­e and heartless as she carries out her plan, but she also exudes human moral qualities dealing with her father.

But as she agrees to carry out a grand scheme in exchange of millions, she dazzles quietly as an actor. The actors playing her schoolmate­s and accomplice­s do just as well.

What the film tells its audience is that cheating is universal and that it happens even in the schools.

Brilliant daughter reminds her father that cheating started on the very date he donated a huge sum of money to the school to facilitate her admission.

As she sells her brilliant scheme to schoolmate­s, she reminds one of them to accept cheating for what it is. “The earlier you accept it, is good for you,” she tells a hesitant schoolmate. “Life will cheat on you anyway.”

Could this be the reason for assorted scams happening in the country?

In a big context, Bad Genius becomes a millennial parable of evil as it haunts the schools and finds endless equivalent­s in big business and government apparatus. It is a simple story with big lessons to impart on cheaters.

For this reason alone, this wellmade Thai movie is worthy of everyone’s patronage.

It tells us genius is good, but it can go wayward and wreak havoc on gullible humanity.

It didn’t take long for the movie to find internatio­nal audiences.

Bad Genius was the opening feature of the 16th New York Asian Film Festival and won Best Feature and Screen Internatio­nal Rising Star Asia award for lead star Chutimon.

It also won the Fukuoka Audience Award at the Focus on Asia Fukuoka Internatio­nal Film Festival 2017 and is now headed for Vancouver and London filmfests.

Bad Genius — also starring Eisaya Hosuwan, Teeradon Supapunpin­yo, Chanon Santinator­nkul, Thaneth Warakuklnu­kroh and Sarinrat Thomas — is now showing in cinemas. It is distribute­d locally by Silverline Multimedia.

 ??  ?? In a big context, the Thai movie becomes a millennial parable of evil as it haunts the schools and finds endless equivalent­s in big business and government apparatus.
In a big context, the Thai movie becomes a millennial parable of evil as it haunts the schools and finds endless equivalent­s in big business and government apparatus.

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