Poot Mae Nam Khong (Thai: ภูตแม่น้ำโขง, RTGSPhut Mae Nam Khong, literally The Spirit of Mekong River ) is a Thai Horror Superstition Lakorn, remade from 1990 lakorn of the same name. The lakorn starring by Weir Sukollawat and Jui Warattaya as the Main roles and Morakot Aimee Kittisara as the ghost.

Poot Mae Nam Khong
Thai teaser poster
Created bySumruay Rukchart
Opening theme2535 - 2536
" Poot Mae Nam Khong "
2551
" Mot Jai Khong Chun Ku Toe "
2565
" Chun Young Kid Tueng "
" Sai Nam Gub Kwarm Rak "
Country of originThailand
No. of episodes50
Production
Running timeapprox. 60-70 minutes (per episode)
Original release
NetworkBBTV Channel 7
Release28 December 1992 (1992-12-28) –
2 March 1993 (1993-03-02)
Release4 October (2008-10-04) –
7 November 2008 (2008-11-07)
NetworkChannel 3
Release20 August (2022-08-20) –
23 September 2022 (2022-09-23)
Related
Silamanee

Summary edit

Every river has its own soul as vengeance never dies.

Dr. Akkanee and his crew travels to a village that is old fashion and superstitious to study the paranormal and that prove that it is not true. In the village he meets and falls for a girl named Bunpaun. He is curious about her since he often dreams about her before coming to the village. The village is close to the Mekong river, which the villagers believe house spirits and deities. This is true as a spirit of a vengeful princess resides underneath the river waiting for her betrothal, which is the reincarnated Dr. Akkanee.

In a previous life, Dr. Akkanee traveled from his land to marry the princess. The princess is taken with him when they first meet and immediately falls in love with him. Dr. Akkanee tells her that he wants to become a monk for a short while to dedicate his life to prayer and contemplation. The princess compromises and agrees to postpone the wedding. One day she goes to his room to bring him snacks and catches him with her younger sister, who she is very close too and the reincarnated Bunpaun, in an innocent yet intimate moment. It was obvious that the two were seeing each other behind her back. In rage, princess cursed them both and vows revenge for their betrayal. The hatred she had for the two caused her to lose her beauty and become a vicious spirit that plagues the village.

In the present time, Bunpaun finds an enormous egg at the bank of Mekong river and is compelled to eat. When she ate it, it turned her into a vassal, possessed by the princess now queen (or the Mother) of Mekong river who had long lusted for revenge. After the possession, Bunpaun disappeared from the village. When she returned, carrying the dreadful spirit inside her, the evil queen began killing local young girls one by one in order sustain her power. No exorcist got rid of her, no technology destroyed her, only the true love of Bunpaun and Dr. Ake was able to break into her vengeful heart......

Cast edit

1992
2008
2022
Main
  • Warit Sirisantana as Khun Saeng Muang (Nobles of Wiang Ya Nong) / Dr. Akkanee (The son of Dr. Prawet)
  • Eisaya Hosuwan as Jaonang Kaew Baw Thong (Princess Wiangya Nong) / Buapun (Boonruen's daughter)
  • Preeyakarn Jaikanta as Jaomae Torhoog (Princess Wiangya Nong) / Jaomae Torhoog (Poot Mae Nam Khong)
  • Chanatip Phothongka as Phaya-Lue (I serve Sri Usa) / Thid-Ken (Thonmee fan has)
  • Saranya Jumpatip as Kam-La (I'm a servant of Princess Kaew Buathong.) / Thonmee (Bua Pan's friend)
Supporting
Guest Appearances

Reception edit

Poot Mae Nam Khong was well-received as a result of the number of satisfied viewers despite it disappointing some. The Lakorn became one of Rating hits for Ch7 during October 6–12 (refer to its second week of airing). The lakorn received a 13 rating from 6.73 million people watching ranked number #3 behind another 2 lakorn starring Pancake.[1]

Now, the Lakorn ranked as one of Ch7’s hit makers for the second half of the year along with Silamanee and Muay Inter. It is reported that after the lakorn, the main actress, Jui Warattaya, become popular again after being absent from the big screen for long time.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-02-10. Retrieved 2009-01-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link):Introducing Lyn’s Lakorn Blog. Accessed January 07, 2009
  2. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-01-01. Retrieved 2009-01-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link):Introducing Lyn’s Lakorn Blog. Accessed January 07, 2009

External links edit