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Thailand, 1999, 35 mm, 105 mins, Colour, Dolby SRD EX, 1:185 flat, 9,450 ft., 5 reels, Thai, copyright notice: © 2000 FILM Bangkok, a division of BEC-Tero Entertainment Co., Ltd. All right reserved.
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Director
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Oxide & Danny Pang
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Produced by
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Nonzee Nimibutr
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Executive Producers
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Pracha Maleenont, Brian L. Marcar, Adirek Wattaleela
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Screenplay
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Oxide & Danny Pang
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Cinematography
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Decha Seemanta
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Art Director
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Noppadol Nopsuwanchai
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Editors
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Oxide & Danny Pang
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Production Designer
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Wut Chaosilp
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Costume Design
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Ekasith Meeprasertsakul
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Music
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Orange Music
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Sound
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Orange Music
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Casting
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Pasiree Panya
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Production Company
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Film Bangkok
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Pawarith Monkolpisit
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as Kong
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Premsinee Ratanasopha
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as Fon
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Patharawarin Timkul
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as Aom
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Pisek Intrakanchit
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as Jo
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Korkiate Limpapat
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Piya Boonnak
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Kong, a professional killer, has been mute since childhood. He plies the city’s bitterest streets, with silence his only response to the killings and assassinations he performs. He is deadly. He is numb. He enacts his grisly tasks with a sociopathic coldness – his steady, impersonal revenge on the world. Ultimately, the chance for his transformation (and redemption) finally arrives in the form of a girl able to provide the only tenderness and warmth he’s ever known. It could save him. It could kill him. A gritty story, the film is a powerful thriller, with strong emphasis on style, suave cutting techniques, effects, and urbane production values. Its post-production took place partly in Hong Kong (the Pang brothers’ hometown) and the film carries a little of the Hong Kong urban tradition within it. Fast-paced, bloody and exciting, this film shows Bangkok’s darker worlds, and the glimmer of hope possible in the dimmest of lives. It’s a film about cities, a film about death. With its high-speed chases, its gunfire and action, its intensity, Bangkok Dangerous is a killer.
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