Apichatpong Weerasethakul Application icon

Apichatpong Weerasethakul 1.0

49 MB / 0+ Downloads / Rating 5.0 - 1 reviews


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Apichatpong Weerasethakul, developed and published by Trafik, has released its latest version, 1.0, on 2016-12-02. This app falls under the News & Magazines category on the Google Play Store and has achieved over 1 installs. It currently holds an overall rating of 5.0, based on 1 reviews.

Apichatpong Weerasethakul APK available on this page is compatible with all Android devices that meet the required specifications (Android 2.3+). It can also be installed on PC and Mac using an Android emulator such as Bluestacks, LDPlayer, and others.

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App Screenshot

App Screenshot

App Details

Package name: fr.trafik.fr

Updated: 8 years ago

Developer Name: Trafik

Category: News & Magazines

Installation Instructions

This article outlines two straightforward methods for installing Apichatpong Weerasethakul on PC Windows and Mac.

Using BlueStacks

  1. Download the APK/XAPK file from this page.
  2. Install BlueStacks by visiting http://bluestacks.com.
  3. Open the APK/XAPK file by double-clicking it. This action will launch BlueStacks and begin the application's installation. If the APK file does not automatically open with BlueStacks, right-click on it and select 'Open with...', then navigate to BlueStacks. Alternatively, you can drag-and-drop the APK file onto the BlueStacks home screen.
  4. Wait a few seconds for the installation to complete. Once done, the installed app will appear on the BlueStacks home screen. Click its icon to start using the application.

Using LDPlayer

  1. Download and install LDPlayer from https://www.ldplayer.net.
  2. Drag the APK/XAPK file directly into LDPlayer.

If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to contact us.

Previous Versions

Apichatpong Weerasethakul 1.0
2016-12-02 / 49 MB / Android 2.3+

About this app

Pascale Cassagnau

Apichatpong Weerasethakul,
Théorie des objets personnels
(une esthétique de l’effet spécial)

Kraft Éditions, 2016.

After studying video and contemporary art, in particular in Chicago and at Le Fresnoy, the Thai film-maker Apichatpong Weerasethakul made a handful of short films in Thailand, questioning the porous borderlines between fiction and documentary, in a lyrical manner. This video-maker’s work is representative of a new wave of Thai film-makers who went abroad to study, and came to film by way of advertising, the visual arts, clips and TV series. Devised as a series of intimist portraits and geographical surveys, the video films consist of long static shots focusing on a group of rootless people living on the country’s borders, and dealing with the problem of not belonging anywhere.

Acclaimed at the 2001 International Film Festival in Paris at the Forum des Images, Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s first full-length 35 mm film titled Mysterious Object at Noon already offered a precise idea of the video-maker’s aesthetic orientations, encouraging a naturalist theme, and his desire to keep the camera at some remove from his anonymous characters, to usher in what he calls ‘enigmatic time-related material’.
"Blissfully Yours" was selected in 2002 in Cannes at the Quinzaine des réalisateurs , while "Tropical Malady" was awarded a prize in the 2004 official competition, pursuing a cinematographic approach on the boundary between documentary and fiction. Three other films then followed, “Syndrome and a Century” (2006) , “Uncle Boonmee” ( 2010) which won the Palme d’or at the Cannes festival, before his two latest works “Hotel Mekong “(2013), and “ Cemetery Of Splendour” ( 2015).
The book  Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Théorie des objets personnels (une esthétique de l’effet spécial) maps the film-maker’s whole oeuvre, from a retrospective angle, illustrating the unusual spirituality of this cinema.

The bilingual digital book deals abundantly with the interplay of image editing and the photographic dimension of images, as well as their relation to sound and music. Seventeen short films, most of them unpublished, punctuate the reading of the album which contains more than 200 illustrations, plus an original sound track, like the sound track for the film “Hotel Mekong”.
The digital book, whose architecture has been devised by the graphic designers Joel and Pierre Rodière and Zouher Belhouari, has no menu or precise interface. The computer graphics used offer an excellent readability and a great fluidity between the various elements, like an album.

Two navigation modes will help readers to deal with the text/image relation. A vertical mode for scrolling the text, incorporating reference images in the corpus of the films mentioned, and a horizontal mode making it possible to “randomly” discover a library of images and videos. With neither hierarchy nor logic, the user strolls among images and for the most part unpublished films, underpinned by a novel sound environment devised by Chai Bathana.