Dek hor | |
Director: | Songyos Sugmakanan |
Producer: | Yodphet Sudsawad |
Starring: | Charlie Trairat Chintara Sukapatana |
Music: | Chumpol Sepswadi |
Cinematography: | Niramon Ross |
Editing: | Pongsatorn Kosolpothisup |
Distributor: | GTH |
Runtime: | 110 minutes |
Country: | Thailand |
Language: | Thai |
Dek hor (Thai: เด็กหอ, also Dorm or My School) is a 2006 Thai horror-drama film directed by Songyos Sugmakanan.
In Thailand, young Ton Chatree (Trairat) is sent to a boarding school by his father to get good grades and does not tell his mother about his father having an affair. Once in the school, Ton feels like an outcast and misses his family and friends. His new schoolmates tell ghost stories about a boy who died in the school swimming pool and a young pregnant woman who committed suicide. The stories frighten him, thereby exacerbating Ton's difficulties adjusting to the school. However, Ton becomes close friends with another lonely boy, Vichien (Chienthaworn), who Ton later discovers is the boy who drowned, and his death repeats every night. Ton finds a way to help his friend rest in peace.
At the same time, Ms. Pranee (Sukapatana), the school administrator, is deeply troubled by Vichien's death because she believes incorrectly that Vichien committed suicide and that it was partly her fault. At the end of the movie, Ton tells Pranee the truth, that Vichien's death was an accident and that Pranee should not blame herself.
The film was screened at the 2006 Bangkok International Film Festival. It opened in wide release in Thailand on February 23, 2006, and was the No. 1 film that weekend, earning nearly US$544,000.[1] The film has had theatrical releases in Singapore and Malaysia and at other film festivals, including the Pusan International Film Festival.
It received praise from critics for the performances of the child actors and Chintara Sukapatana, as well as for its color-drained photography and the production design of the old boarding school.[2] [3]
The film was co-written and directed by Songyos Sugmakanan, one of the six directors of the 2003 hit Thai film Fan Chan, which also starred Charlie Trairat. The film was critically acclaimed in Thailand, where it won more honors than any other film, including best picture from the Bangkok Critics Assembly.