Vancouver Sun

‘It has everything ... loss, as well as jubilation’

Thailand wants to control films about cave ordeal

- KAWEEWIT KAEWJINDA

BANGKOK Thailand’s military government wants to control how movies portray the ordeal of the young soccer players and their heroic rescue from a flooded cave that drew worldwide interest and the attention of foreign filmmakers.

Culture Minister Vira Rojpochana­rat said he will propose at next week’s Cabinet meeting that a special committee be establishe­d to oversee the production of films, documentar­ies and videos related to the experience­s of the 12 boys and their coach who were trapped in a cave for almost three weeks.

The rescue, carried out successful­ly against high odds, was a rare moment of uplifting news from Thailand, which has been mired in political conflict and heavyhande­d military rule for more than a decade.

Even as the world watched the saga surroundin­g the cave, a boat sinking off a southern resort island claimed almost 50 Chinese tourists, an event that normally would have registered as a high-profile debacle.

The cave rescue also allowed the government of Prime Minister Prayuth Chanocha, who has been criticized for political manoeuvrin­g to stay in power after elections planned for next year, to share in some glory.

The government’s Thailand Film Office already regulates the production of films shot in Thailand by foreign companies, including vetting scripts and issuing filming permits, but Vira said the committee would oversee content, licensing and the protection of privacy of the rescued team and their families.

Vira, speaking after a film board meeting Thursday chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Kreangam, said five foreign film production companies have shown interest in making a movie or documentar­y about the cave rescue and some had already been on location to collect informatio­n.

Thai film producers have also shown interest but have not yet contacted the government, Vira said.

The boys and coach of the Wild Boars soccer team were released from the hospital on Wednesday. At a news conference, they described how they got trapped in the cave, and after 10 days cut off from the outside world, were astonished to see two British divers rising from muddy waters and assuring them work was underway to rescue them.

“This (story) has all the right elements,” Vira said.

“If you talk about drama associated with filmmaking, it has everything. It has loss, as well as jubilation. The content and story it has for filmmaking is very complete. Even if you don’t create additional drama, these events had every flavour.”

Several murals and sculptures have already been commission­ed as a way to remember the epic cave adventure that captured internatio­nal headlines.

Many focus on Saman Gunan, a former Thai navy SEAL who volunteere­d to help with the rescue effort and died while diving on a mission to supply the cave with oxygen tanks essential to helping the boys escape. Saman is being treated as a national hero.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada