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Babb Bird Bird Show #4/1990 Man Yu Nai Mue Manut Bum Moe Raeng

Man Yu Nai Mue Manut Bum Moe Raeng is the name of the episode of the 4th Bird Bird Show concert, held from 9 - 26 August 1990, held at the main auditorium, Thailand Cultural Center, for 22 shows, number of people. Viewed by 44,000 people, the guest this time was Hattaya Kasetsang, who acted as the heroine of the music series Boomerang for Bird Thongchai in that era, until it became an explosive hit of the year. This time, the Bird Bird Show is a showcase of the workers. (Boomerang Man which is called after the concert) therefore focuses on various performances related to hands such as sign language, hand shadow performances which is the first time in Thailand. who brought sign language to perform in concerts

Babb Bird Bird Show #4/1990 Man Yu Nai Mue Manut Bum Moe Raeng

NR 1990
ฅนลูกทุ่ง

Kamoon (Panna Rittikrai) loves one of the village young lady called Nam Oi. One Bangkokian man is coming to the village hoping to get pure girls. The village lady is agressed by the two villagers. The Bangkok guy helped by two bodyguards including (Krissanapong Rachata) chases them away. The guy proposes a job to Nam Oi in Bangkok. The mother is reluctant but the father wishes to receive the money given as enticement. Finally Nam Oi accepts in order to support her older parents (ตอบแทนบุญคุณพ่อแม่). Panna is on the way to request Nam Oi’s hand through an engagement procession parade but the Bangkok man is taking her with him. Panna realises she is gone. Under a misunderstanding, Pana believes she goes willingly with the Bangkok guy as a boyfriend. He tries to stop them but gets heavily beaten by the two bodyguards. An old teacher takes pity on Kamoon and teaches him martial arts.

ฅนลูกทุ่ง

NR 1996
Black Magic Tiger

Khom and Plabprueng are married and live with their children in a small village in the forest. One day Chim, the son of the village chief has returned home after leaving the village for years. Chim used to be Plabprueng's childhood boyfriend and she has an affair with him. When Khom finds out, he kills them both and flees the village with the children. In the forest he finds a house occupied by a mother and daughter who are actually demons who can change into tigers. Unaware of this fact, he decides to settle down and make the tiger daughter his new wife. But it turns out the tigers have a sinister reason to let him be with them because years ago Khom's dad killed the tiger father and they're looking for vengeance.

Black Magic Tiger

2.0 1990
Tell Them We're No. 1

Wow, a young boy living with his family in a big city, has a problem. His father is a gambler, and Wow, indisputably, is a jinx. Once, Wow causes his father's arrest, then a sequence of unfortunate events befall on everyone close to Wow. Eventually, the long-suffering father sends Wow away to an uncle in the country. But if the uncle and grandfather are as gentle and kind as the child's loving mother, the auntie is a tyrant. Luckily, Wow meets a young girl and soon his luck changes.

Tell Them We're No. 1

9.0 1990
Burông Tité. The Choir of Doves amongst the Jawi of Southern Thailand

The Jawi are an ethnic minority group living in the southeastern provinces of Thailand. Descending from the famous Patani sultanate which was annexed by Siam in the twentieth century, this rural people of Islamic faith carry on the traditional Malaysian culture. What makes them particular is the importance they give to a local variety of zebra dove (Geopelia striata), called the Burông Tité. The Jawi prize the quality and beauty of its singing so much that their admiration for it reaches almost a cult status. They raise and train the doves for song contests. The winning birds bring their owners not only social prestige, but sometimes quite a substantial fortune, as their value can mount up to tens of thousands of euros. The film unveils the secrets of raising and preparing the doves for the singing contests. And through this, we discover the life and culture of this Malay minority.

Burông Tité. The Choir of Doves amongst the Jawi of Southern Thailand

NR 1998
The Akha Way

For over a thousand years, the Akha people have inhabited the hills of Asia — mainly Southern China, Burma and Northern Thailand. The Akha Way or Akhazaunh, is the code by which they live. This documentary describes their origins and their culture. It contains extraordinary footage of a shaman healing ceremony; a funeral, with the ritual sacrifice of a water buffalo; the reading of a pig's liver after a new house is built, and more. Today the Akha Way is fast disappearing. Forced migration, Christianity, money and drugs are eroding the cultural heritage of the Akha tribe.

The Akha Way

9.0 1999