Toronto Stories Part IV: Pen-ek Ratanaruang’s Nymph

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As the Toronto International Film Festival draws to a close, we are featuring our last blog on TIFF films. We may even have kept the best for last, but we are by no means overlooking Campion’s Bright Star or Audiard’s Prophet, but Thai director Pen-ek Ratanaruang’s Nymph is a huge visual treat.

In the tradition of I Am Cuba and Touch of Evil, Ratanaruang opens with an eerie scene shot that is as sensual as it is suspenseful. It is one long shot of nature, catching two men in the process of raping a woman. Then begins a long, long series of camera movements with the lens running across tree bark, leaves, forest plants and water. As though Rataranuang were asking nature to make love to the camera. Imagine a really tense FPS hunt inside your favorite porn scene. It is all accompanied by an uncannily sinister soundscape, finally closing (two cranes and a steadycam later) on the two dead men floating in knee-high, murky water.

That is the opening of Nymph. And like Ploy before it, Nymph deals with the intrusion of a third element into the relationship of a blaséd couple. This time, the element is a tree.

“The idea for this film came from the image of a guy doing it with a tree. Then it grew from there,” Ratanaruang says. In old Thai legends tree spirits are personified by vengeful and lustful females. Thus the title.

This is where the cautionary tale begins.

Nop, a photographer, brings May along on a photo assignment in the forest. She’s detached, laconic and can’t seem to pry herself away from her cell phone. We know she has a lover back at the office. Ratanaruang cast lead actress Wanida Termthanaporn, an unknown, because “she has a guilty expression all the time. And that’s what the script lacked—guilt.”

Nop soon meets the fateful tree. Yes it sounds far-fetched and maybe even a little silly. But Ratanaruang has so adeptly prepared us for this that it works. The film never falls prey to the Hollywood trappings à la Lord of The Rings. So no SFX to embody supernatural forces that are seemingly the cause of Nop’s disappearance. Instead, Ratanaruang relies on skillful story telling that is all ambiance driven, banging out a few themes on the way: contemporary angst, alienating technology, illicit affairs and the destruction of nature.

The film is almost a horror, but it’s more of a suspenseful human drama than anything else. Do check it out for size…