- Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters
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Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters (2499 Antapan Krong Muang)
The Thai movie poster.Directed by Nonzee Nimibutr Produced by Visute Poolvoralaks Written by Wisit Sasanatieng (screenplay)
Suriyong Saktaisong (story)Starring Jessadaporn Pholdee
Noppachai Muttaweevong
Attaporn Teemakorn
Supakorn Kitsuwon
Chartchai Ngamsan
Apichart Choosakul
Champagne XMusic by Orange Music Cinematography Winai Patomboon Editing by Sunit Ussavinikul Distributed by Tai Entertainment Release date(s) April 11, 1997
Running time 110 min Country Thailand Language Thai Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters (Thai: 2499 อันธพาลครองเมือง or 2499 Antapan Krong Muang) is a 1997 crime drama film about young Thai gangsters in 1950s Thailand. Featuring John Woo-style heroic bloodshed, it was the debut film from director Nonzee Nimibutr and was the first screenplay by director and screenwriter Wisit Sasanatieng.
The 2499 in the Thai title refers to the year in the Buddhist calendar when the story starts, corresponding to the Gregorian year 1956.
Contents
Plot
Dang, the son of a prostitute, growing up in 1950s Thailand, compensates for his inferiority complex by boosting up his ego. At the age of 13, he killed a man who was beating his mother. By age 16, he had dropped out of school and started his own protection racket. With his right-hand man Lam Sing, Dang is highly protective of Piak, and is also friends with Pu Bottle Bomb and Pu's sidekick Dum.
Dang attracts the attention of a young night club singer named Wallapa, who pressures Dang to stop being a gangster and live a normal life. Dang's mother also wishes that he would stop being gangster and ordain as a Buddhist monk.
Dang carves out more territory by killing the local crime boss Mad Dog. Meanwhle, Piak is caught up in a fight between rival school gangs, instigated by Pu and Dum. The fight leads to a falling out between Dang and Pu the beginning of a feud between the two. Following a military coup all the gangsters must leave Bangkok for the countryside, Dang, Lam Sing and Piak go to work for Sergeant Chien, a former policeman turned gangster, at Chien's bar and gambling den next to an American military base. Chien needs more muscle to go against a rival operator, Headman Tek, and brings in Pu and Dum against Dang's wishes. Pu and Dum stir up trouble in the gambling den and reignite their feud with Dang's gang although Sergeant Chein tries to calm them. However Sergeant Chien is killed by a motorcyclist gunman and Pu and Dum go to work with his rival Headman Tek forcing Dang's gang out of the town.
Dang returns to Bangkok, where he plans on fulfilling his mother's wishes and taking his oath as a monk. However Pu and Dum show up during the ceremony and gun battle ensues. Lam Sing is killed, and Dang and Piak are wounded, but Pu and Dum are killed.
In an epilogue, narrated by an older Piak, it turns out Dang survived his wounds, but continued as a gangster seemingly unable to become a monk, and then died in a car accident at age 24, just like his idol James Dean.
Cast
- Jessadaporn Pholdee as Dang Bireley
- Noppachai Muttaweevong as Lam Sing
- Attaporn Teemakorn as Piak
- Supakorn Kitsuwon as Pu Bottle Bomb
- Chartchai Ngamsan as Dum Esso
- Champagne X as Wallapa
- Apichart Choosakul as Sergeant Chien
- Parichart Borsudhi as Dang's mother
- Piya Bunnak as Pol
- Teerachai Plugpimarn as Mad Dog
- Suthakorn Jaimun as Headman Tek
Awards and nominations
- 1997 Vancouver International Film Festival - nominated for a Dragons and Tigers award.
External links
- Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters at the Internet Movie Database
- Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters (2499 Antapan Krong Muang) at AllRovi
- Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters at the Thai Film Database
- Thai Film Reviews by Simon Booth
Feature films directed by Nonzee Nimibutr Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters (1997) • Nang Nak (1999) • Jan Dara (2001) • Three ("The Wheel") (2002) • OK Baytong (2003) • Queens of Langkasuka (2008)Wisit Sasanatieng Feature films: Tears of the Black Tiger (2000) • Mah Nakorn (2005) • The Unseeable (2006)
Screenplays: Dang Bireley's and Young Gangsters (1997) • Nang Nak (1999)Cinema of Thailand Films A-Z • Chronology of films • Animation • Awards • Cinemas • Festivals • LGBT films • Locations • Studios
Actors • Directors • Cinematographers • Editors • Producers • ScreenwritersCategories:- 1997 films
- 1990s crime films
- Directorial debut films
- Thai films
- Thai-language films
- Films set in 1956
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