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Artikel: Me Myself I (film) GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi
Me Myself I is a 1999 Australian-French romantic comedy film. It was the first feature film by director Pip Karmel, and was released and reviewed internationally.
Plot
Pamela Drury is single and works as a serious journalist. She spends her birthday alone and becomes lonely and reflects upon her life and the choices she made and secretly wishes she had gotten married and had children. In a box of photos of old boyfriends, she reflects upon why she broke up with one in particular, Robert Dickson, 13 years earlier. She also meets an interesting man, Ben and follows him home, only to see through his window that he is with his family and looks very happy. Shortly afterwards, she is hit by a car while crossing the street.
The woman who was driving the car is also Pamela, but is Pamela Dickson; she is from an alternate universe in which she married Robert 13 years earlier. Pamela Dickson takes Pamela Drury to the Dickson family home and the two of them talk in the kitchen. Suddenly, Pamela Dickson's kids come home and she disappears, leaving the unmarried Pamela Drury in a house she has never seen before with three children she does not know. The children assume she is their mother, although they do not quite recognize her sometimes.
She soon finds out that her alternate version Pamela Dickson lives in a dull marriage and writes lightweight fluff articles for a mainstream ladies magazine, rather than being the serious reporter that Drury is. She meets Ben again, but in this time-line he was never married and still mourns the loss of the great love of his life, who was killed just before their graduation from college.
At first, Pamela Drury was pleased to be with Robert again after all these years apart, but she is soon unhappy and annoyed with married life, and quarrels with Robert. She embarks on an affair with Ben, not mentioning to him that she has a husband and kids (because she still doesn't think of herself as married or a mother). Ben visits her and learns the truth, and walks away angry and disappointed. Soon, Pamela Drury embraces having a family and falls for Robert again, and even stimulates him and enlivens her marriage. Then when Pamela Drury is in a restaurant bathroom, Pamela Dickson shows up again, and the two women switch back to their former lives. Pamela Dickson had been living the life of single Pamela Drury and enjoyed it but ultimately missed her husband and kids so she came back. Pamela Drury is single once more and embraces her life with a new appreciation of all that being single and having a career has to offer. She learns that while she was gone, Pamela Dickson began dating Ben, who actually is divorced from the woman she saw through the window, the same woman who alternate-Ben had thought was his soul mate. Ultimately she sees that both lives are appealing and offer a lot to appreciate.
Cast
Rachel Griffiths as Pamela Drury / Pamela Dickson
David Roberts as Robert Dickson
Sandy Winton as Ben Monroe
Yael Stone as Stacy Dickson
Shaun Loseby as Douglas Dickson
Trent Sullivan as Rupert Dickson
Christine Stephen-Daly as Deirdre
Felix Williamson as Geoff
Rebecca Frith as Terri
Ann Burbrook as Janinie
Frank Whitten as Charlie
Terence Crawford as Allen
Maeliosa Stafford as Max
Kirstie Hutton as Sally
Peter Brailey as Roger
Mariel McClorey as Harriet
Andrew Caryofyllis as Harry
Lenore Munro as Sophie
Lisa Belfiore as Molly
Lyndon Wilkinson as Pamela's Mother (voice on phone)
Spud as Brandy the dog
Reception
= Critical response
=The film was mainly seen in Australia, but was internationally distributed and widely reviewed. Roger Ebert and other critics have emphasized Rachel Griffiths' performance in the lead, but Andrew Sarris noted in The New York Observer, "In any event, Ms. Karmel, whether as erstwhile writer, editor, or maker of short films, has earned the right to a long and fruitful directorial career on the strength of Me Myself I, one of the most striking feature-film debuts ever."
= Awards
=The film won two awards for sound at the Australian Screen Sound Guild awards and won First Works Section at the Festroia International Film Festival. It was nominated for the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Direction, Best Screenplay, Best Actress in a Leading Role and Best Achievement in Editing.
= Box office
=Me Myself I grossed $2,698,330 at the box office in Australia, and about $370,000 in the U.S.
See also
Cinema of Australia
References
External links
Me Myself I at IMDb
Me Myself I at Oz Movies
Artikel: Me Myself & I (film) GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi
Me... Myself (Thai: ขอให้รักจงเจริญ) or Khaw hai rak jong jaroen) is a 2007 Thai romance drama film directed by Pongpat Wachirabunjong. Ananda Everingham stars as a gay male dancer in a transvestite cabaret who has amnesia after being struck by a car.
Plot
A man is robbed while making a call in a phone booth. Staggering in the middle of the road from the beating by the thieves, he is then struck by a car driving by a woman named Oom. Feeling sorry for him, Oom brings the man to her apartment and gives him shelter. The man, it turns out, has developed amnesia. Based the name on a pendant the man is wearing – his only possession – Oom names him Tan. A doctor's examination reveals that Tan is uninjured except that he can't remember anything about his life prior to being struck by Oom's car. Tan is given a journal and urged to free associate in an effort to recall his past life.
Oom is experiencing trouble in her own life. She has recently broken up with her domineering boyfriend, Krit, whom she still sees at her workplace, where she is a creative director for an advertising agency. Oom has also had motherhood thrust upon her, since she is caring for her nephew, the son of her dead sister.
Initially, having Tan around adds stress to the situation, and when Tan reorganizes her stacks of magazines, and interferes in her disciplining of Ohm, she is angry.
But Tan proves useful around the apartment. He is looked up to as a father figure by Ohm. And for Oom, he builds up the self-esteem and confidence she lost in her relationship with Krit. Tan seems to instinctively know things about femininity, such as what dress Oom should wear and what shade of lipstick is appropriate. As a family unit with Oom and Ohm, Tan goes to an amusement park and defends Oom after he gets in trouble for fighting in school, with the result being Tan getting punched by the other boy's father.
While visions of his past nag him, Tan seems perfectly happy with Oom and Ohm, especially after he becomes romantically involved with Oom. "I don't want to remember anymore. I want to be like this with you here, forever," he tells Oom one night as they watch the sunset from a ledge outside her apartment.
Eventually the memories of the past catch up with Tan. Taking some numbers he wrote in his journal, he retraces his steps to the scene of the car accident, and eventually finds the numbers are an address to a house. The home belongs to a man whom Tan had a homosexual relationship with, but since the man is married to a woman and has a family, he must keep the relationship secret.
Meanwhile, the police call Oom. They have some items recovered from the thieves who attacked Tan on the night he was struck by her car. Among the items is a mobile phone. The police have already called the number, and Tan's friends from Phuket on their way to Bangkok to claim the phone and find out more about their missing friend. The friends, it turns out, are all katoey dancers in a transvestite cabaret, where Tan was the star attraction.
Cast
Ananda Everingham as Tan/Tanya
Chayanan Manomaisantiphap as Oom
Monton Arnupabmard as Ohm
Puttachat Pongsuchat as Boss Oil
Piya Vimuktayon as Krit
Direk Amatayakul as Dr. Kriangkrai
Maria Dissayanand as Dr. Maria
Pratanporn Phuwadolpitak as Neighbor across the hall
Pornpisit Somchatvong as Neighbor across the hall
Tanit Jitnukul as Police sergeant (cameo)
Andrew James Legon as tourist (cameo)
Hannah 'Tingtong' Worthington as lead tourist (cameo)
Release
= Festivals and awards
=Me ... Myself was featured in the Thai Panorama program at the 2007 Bangkok International Film Festival. It was screened at the 38th International Film Festival of India, where Pongpat Wachirabunjong won a Silver Peacock award for "most promising director".
References
External links
Khaw hai rak jong jaroen at IMDb