When Ron Howard set out to retell the
story of the dramatic 2018 rescue of a young soccer team from a flooded cave in
northern
Thailand, he knew he would have to grapple with underwater
photography, hordes of extras, and a handful of surly protagonists in the form
of the British divers who successfully saved the boys through extraordinary
methods. But he also knew that, as an American director tackling a specifically
Thai story, authenticity would be crucial — and that any deviation from
verisimilitude would come at his peril.
اضافة اعلان
So for the new film, “Thirteen Lives,” which debuts
Friday on Prime Video, Howard and his producing partner, Brian Grazer, hired
Thai cinematographer Sayombhu Mukdeeprom (“Call Me by Your Name”), employed
producers Raymond Phathanavirangoon and Vorakorn Ruetaivanichkul, and relied on
actors from the region to serve as his guides.
One such actor Howard came to trust was 33-year-old
Pattrakorn Tungsupakul, a petite television star from northern Thailand who
plays Buahom, a single mother forced to wait helplessly at the entrance to the
cave for an excruciating 17 days. Timid and afraid for her son, Tungsupakul’s
character serves as the film’s emotional center.
The whole experience was refreshing — and strange —
for an actress who has spent close to a decade working in Thai television, an
environment that Tungsupakul says has not always been very collaborative or
encouraging.
“Ron, he always asked me, ‘What do you want to do?’
‘What do you want to say?’ And he listened,” she said in an interview in Los
Angeles, where she was accompanied by her older sister, Rugeradh Tungsupakul, a
lawyer who served as her interpreter. “Because he trusted me so much, I had to
prepare myself and work harder. I had to bring my experience to this project.”
She may also be the film’s secret weapon.
“She’s the most broadly relatable person in the
film,” said Howard, who compared Tungsupakul’s character’s seemingly endless
wait outside the cave to being stuck in the waiting room while your child is in
surgery — if the procedure lasted 17 days. “Dramatically, she’s the most
heartbreaking.”
Tungsupakul hails from
Chiang Mai, a city not far
from the Tham Luang Cave where the boys were trapped. Howard was initially
attracted to Tungsupakul for her visceral connection to the character, but when
he discovered she was also from the area and would not have to learn the very
specific dialect, he knew she was the right woman for the job.
Tungsupakul, who goes by the nickname Ploy, became
an integral part of the production team. She improvised lines, researched
specific cultures and traditions of her hometown, selected her own wardrobe and
even suggested plot points that made it into the film.
Getting details right was especially complicated
because
COVID restrictions prevented Howard from entering Thailand at all.
Instead “Thirteen Lives” was shot in Queensland, Australia, and Howard remotely
oversaw a film crew shooting exteriors in Thailand.
“That was a challenge,” Howard said in an interview.
“And there’s certainly the risk of underachieving in that way.”
Since the producers did not have life rights to the
boys or their families, Tungsupakul was not able to meet with any of the
survivors or their parents. Instead, she studied news footage of the rescue,
particularly the reactions of the parents when journalists peppered them with
questions each day. “The reporters kept asking ‘How do you feel?’ ‘How do you
feel?’ ‘You must be sad,’ ” she said. “It was terrible. But for me, it was good
because I have to do research, and I want to see the real reactions.”
Tungsupakul’s character is a poor working mother who
carries tremendous guilt for not being home enough for her son. She is also
stateless, a recent immigrant from
Myanmar who is not certain her child will be
rescued along with the others because she does not have the proper citizenship.
Her character’s arc involves finding her voice in
the quiet moments: She challenges the governor directly (“How can you
understand? Is your own son going to die?”) — a moment very uncharacteristic
for a culture predicated on politeness and respect. In one scene, she asks a
famous local monk to bless a handful of traditional northern Thai bracelets.
She then gives the bracelets to the divers (played by Colin Farrell and Viggo
Mortensen, among others) before they plunge back into the depths.
Tungsupakul brought
the idea of the bracelets to the production as another example of paying
attention to the local customs. “I asked my friend who studies northern culture
at Chiang Mai University, and he said this is a must-have item,” she said.
“It’s a signature of passing good luck to a person, giving him a blessing that
if you’re going on a dangerous mission, you will be safe.”
Tungsupakul is also one of a handful of female
characters in a male-dominated cast — a factor that Ruetaivanichkul, one of the
producers, said was crucial to creating balance within the production, which is
one of a spate of screen projects, including 2021 documentary “The Rescue,”
about the mammoth effort to save the stranded soccer team and its coach.
(Producer P.J. van Sandwijk worked on both “Thirteen Lives” and “The Rescue.”)
“She introduces femininity and the soft side of
energy,” Ruetaivanichkul said. “She shows the empathy within the group. That is
what Ron emphasized from the very beginning, because otherwise it’s not going
to be different from the story in the documentaries that focus on the rescuers.
We are trying to do the world-building of Thai culture.”
Tungsupakul and
her sister were raised by parents who ran a small business trading construction
materials. She graduated from law school but instead decided to move to Bangkok
to pursue a career in acting. Early success on a 2013 series in which she
played a rural girl forced to move to Bangkok after her father is killed made
her a star in Thailand. When asked if she was famous, Tungsupakul demurred with
a quiet “Yeah” before adding, “But if I say ‘yes,’ then maybe ‘Oh, I’m too
much.’ ”
Tungsupakul’s biggest regret is that her father is
not alive to witness her success. He died before her first television show ran
and had not been happy when she abandoned law for the unpredictable life of an
actress.
“If there is any wish that I could make,” she said,
“I want Prime Video to be available where he is now so that he can watch me in
‘Thirteen Lives,’ too.”
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