Organizer: Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University
Type/Location: In Person / Ithaca, NY
Description:
Join the Southeast Asia Program at Cornell University for a talk by Anocha Suwichakornpong, Associate Professor of Film from Columbia University, who will discuss how fictional narrative filmmaking can serve as a form of resistance under authoritarian regimes, with a focus on her own practice as a filmmaker and artist working in Thailand.
Abstract:
In this talk, I will explore how fictional narrative filmmaking can serve as a form of resistance under authoritarian regimes, focusing on my own practice as a filmmaker and artist working in Thailand. Through a discussion of my recent works, I will reflect on how storytelling, symbolism, and cinematic language become tools to navigate censorship, challenge dominant narratives, and imagine alternative political realities. This talk invites the audience to consider the power of fiction—not as escapism, but as a means of speaking truth in a landscape where direct expression is often suppressed.
About the Speaker:
Anocha Suwichakornpong is a filmmaker whose work is informed by the socio-political history of Thailand. Her films have been the subject of special focus screenings at the Museum of the Moving Image, New York; TIFF Cinematheque, Toronto; and Harvard Film Archive. Anocha’s thesis film, GRACELAND became the first Thai short film to be officially screened at Cannes Film Festival. MUNDANE HISTORY, her first feature film, won numerous awards, including the Tiger Award at the International Film Festival Rotterdam. BY THE TIME IT GETS DARK, Anocha’s second feature, which centers around a student massacre that took place in 1976 by Thai state forces in Bangkok has been screened in festivals such as Locarno, Toronto, BFI London, and Rotterdam. The film won Best Picture and Best Director at Thailand National Film Awards and was chosen as Thailand’s Oscar entry for Best Foreign Language Film.
Anocha founded the Bangkok-based production house, Electric Eel Films, and co-founded the non-profit Purin Pictures. Through these organizations, she supports emerging voices in independent Southeast Asian Cinema.
Anocha is a Prince Claus Laureate, DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Residency, and the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Residency recipient. She was a visiting lecturer at Harvard University from 2018-2020. Her fourth feature film, COME HERE, premiered at Berlinale 2021. In 2022, Anocha directed her first live performance, FREETIME, commissioned by the Walker Art Center. She received the Creative Capital Award instead 2024 for her upcoming film, FICTION. Anocha is an Associate Professor in the MFA Film Program at Columbia University and splits her time between New York and Bangkok, where she’s currently working on her next film, FICTION.
Registration:
To attend the event in person, please register here.