Thai cave Rescue

 Jadon Moses.S

2022510065

AI&DS

2nd Year

Title:-Thai cave Rescue


Content:-

Finished watching all six episodes of Thailand's 2019 _Thai Cave Rescue_, a highly staged film about the 13 players from the Wild Boars youth soccer team being rescued from Tham Luang Cave in northernmost Thailand. Compared to _The Trapped 13: How We Survived the Thai Cave_, it features a lot more characters, facts, and trivia because of its longer running length. The former may fully display the dynamics between people and turns the story into a drama with perceptive depth and in numerous dimensions, while the latter is more succinct.The actors' attempts to resemble their real-life counterparts were nonexistent. My ability to suspend disbelief was severely taxed by the fact that the coach, played by an attractive young man, would have most certainly left rural Chiang Rai for Bangkok. But the ensemble performance was excellent, and each of the six episodes had exquisite writing and editing, all of which might be attributed to the director's obvious passion for the material.

Certain events in the actual history, including the sequences involving the water pumps and the passing of the retired Thai Navy SEAL, to whom Episode 4 is wholly devoted as a memorial to a national hero, appear to have been mixed up in comparison to those in _The Trapped 13_. The action moves quickly; by the conclusion of Episode 2, there has been physical contact with the lost squad._Thai Cave Rescue_ is captivating as dramatized news coverage and as movie entertainment because of the deftly intercut scenes between the stranded team, the boys' parents, the rescuers from England, Australia, Canada, the United States, Cyprus, Finland, Damascus, Germany, and Singapore, and the local officials. In contrast, _The Trapped 13_ is more suspenseful because you can see the actual characters on screen. The most thrilling parts of Episodes 5 and 6 for me were when the team members are actually taken to safety underwater.This film does not tell the story in chronological order. The story starts at a pivotal moment in the rescue efforts, when Titan, the youngest team member, is being talked out of the cave he is stuck in by a diver. It then cuts back to the day before the lads enter Tham Luang.

Another reason this film is so great is that it acknowledges the Buddhist and spiritual aspects. Similar to _The Trapped 13_, it features a death tale in addition to the mythology of the princess-goddess Chao Mae Nang Non. Generally speaking, the lesson is that one's own culture's native gods and goddesses are usually the ones who can save you from death.

It's noteworthy to note that the Thai word "sabay-sabay" means "very easy".


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Thai Cave Rescue

Thai Cave Rescue: A Compelling, if Overextended, Journey into the Depths

Thai Cave Rescue(2022)