Khu Kam: Ill Fated Lovers
“When I die,
I will take this heart filled with love with me and know that I have loved
someone like you.” Each time I watch “Koo Kum: Sunset at Chaophraya,” I am
overcome with sadness and a deep longing of hurt that lingers long after the
film is done. It is based on the novel Khu Kam written by Thommayanti that has
been made into a lakorn quite a few times. The latest lakorn that aired in 2013
on Channel 5 starred Bie Sukrit Wisedkaew and Noona Neungthida Sopon and was
directed by Sant Srikaewlaw.
Bie slipped
on the shoes of Kobori, a young Japanese lieutenant, who comes to reside on the
land of Thailand and meets Angsumalin, a prejudice Thai girl who is waiting for
her lover to return from war. Upon their first meeting by the river, Kobori
falls in love with her purity, her beauty, and her strength. She, however,
despises him with all of her being because he is Japanese, an enemy and will
always remain an enemy. While learning the Thai language, Kobori finally discovers
her name Angsumalin, which means the sun, and so he renames her “Hideko,” in
his native tongue.
The two
begin a love/hate relationship and soon are forced to wed to bring peace to
their land. Kobori makes Hideko a promise that he will not touch her and when
her lover, Vanut, returns, he will have her untouched. As they journey on their
marriage life, Kobori soon discovers that if he thought he couldn’t love her
more, he was wrong. His love consumes every part of him, makes him long for
her, and overcomes him with such power that he finds it hard to be close to her
without touching her. As time goes on, Hideko discovers that the hatred she has
reserved for Kobori is slowly beginning to thaw and that she enjoys his
presence, his smile, and his warmth.
But as she
promised herself to another, she can’t go against her word and continues to
love him in silence while he continues to suffer that she hates him. His promise
of not touching her is soon broken when he returns home from a dance party
drunk and ends up making love to her. The following morning, he begs her for
forgiveness, but she refuses to grant it and tells him that she will carry the
hatred with her everywhere. Little will she know that this small moment
together would create a bond between them.
The two ill-fated
lovers continue on a journey of silent loving and each day as Kobori confesses
his love and holds her in his arms, Hideko begins to soften until she becomes
used to his arms, feeling peace and safety in a time of war. When she starts to
realize that she is in love deeply with him, she frightens herself that
although they would love one another, they may not get the chance to be
together.
Kobori and
Hideko, the two ill-fated lovers in a time of war, has tugged at my heart and
won over and over again. This lakorn has 24 episodes and is filled with a
timeless love that can make any stubborn person fall and cry as these two
lovers wither in their love and passion not knowing what tomorrow would bring.
I am stil grieving for Kobori. While doing various things around the house, he and (Bie's smile);w ill drift into my mind and tears just start pouring. I feel overhelmed with a great saddness. I am 65 yr. Old grandmother. Not usually emotional especially about fiction. But my heart was so touched. Bie Sukrit made this character so real.
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V.Laylab Hobbs
Fort Worth, Texas, USA