FIRST TEXTILES REACH BANGKOK
This film is held by the Imperial War Museum (ID: JFU 648).
Synopsis
In Bangkok, capital of Siam (Thailand) the SS Pangan arrives carrying a cargo of 21,240-yard consignment of Indian cloth, the first to reach Bangkok since the end of the war.
A bale of cloth is swung towards a waiting lorry and is handled by interned Japanese labourers. The tailboard of the lorry is fastened. Thai officials check the bales. A bale is hoisted from the hold. A bale marked 'Textiles'. Lorries driving away. Onboard the Pangan the Thai Prime Minister, Pridi Phanomyong (Pridi Banomyong) addresses the ship's crew and congratulates them on delivering the cargo. The material is inspected by Mr Cairn (American Commercial Attache), Mr Charles Yost (American Charge d'Affaires), Phanomyong, and Mr Harrington-Thompson (British Legation Minister). Two more bales hoisted out and received by Japanese labourers. Alternative angle. Close-up of a bale with 'The Controller Clothing Punjab'.
Notes
The vessel may be the HTMS Pangan, a 1927 Japanese-built transport of the Royal Thai Navy.
During the war Pridi Phanomyong had been Regent and a leader of the Seri Thai, the Free Thai Movement, and cooperated with Allied intelligence.
The dopesheet for this film notes that this cloth was paid for by British authorities and intended for distribution to Thai rice farmers. The economic disruption of the war interrupted supplies of both cloth and foodstuffs, which meant by this period much of the population of south-east Asia was living hungry and in rags.
Titles
- FIRST TEXTILES REACH BANGKOK (Allocated)
Technical Data
- Year:
- 1946
- Running Time:
- 3 minutes
- Film Gauge (Format):
- 35mm
- Colour:
- B&W
- Sound:
- Silent
- Footage:
- 200 ft
Production Credits
- Production Countries:
- GB
- Sponsor
- War Office Directorate of Public Relations
- cameraman
- Povey, P W (Sergeant)
- Production company
- SEAC Film Unit