Sompote Saengduenchai (Thai: สมโพธิ แสงเดือนฉาย; RTGS: Somphot Saengdueanchai; 24 May 1941 – 26 August 2021),[1] internationally known as Sompote Sands, was a Thai film director, special effects creator and producer best known for directing several Thai films especially tokusatsu (special effects-based) genre or monster films such as The 6 Ultra Brothers vs. the Monster Army, Jumborg Ace & Giant, the illegally produced Hanuman and the Five Riders, the 1980 cult classic Crocodile,[2] Phra Rod Meree and the 1985 fantasy monster film Magic Lizard.[3] He was the founder and owner of Chaiyo Productions based in Bang Pa-in, Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya.
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Sompote Sands | |
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สมโพธิ แสงเดือนฉาย | |
Born | Sompote Saengduenchai (1941-05-24)24 May 1941 Phra Pradaeng, Samut Prakan, Thailand |
Died | 26 August 2021 (2021-08-27) (aged 80) Bangkok, Thailand |
Occupation |
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Years active | 1973–2021 |
Known for | Thai tokusatsu films |
Born as the youngest son in a Thai Chinese family in the outskirts Bangkok, Sompote's father was a Chinese immigrant from Guangdong. While he was studying at grade three, Sompote became a freelance photographer. His work was to take photos of King Bhumibol in a boy scout uniform. A photo was published on the cover of Chaiyaphruek, a youth magazine at that time. He was also a private photographer for Jim Thompson. At the age of 15, he was the youngest photographer for Siam Rath, a newspaper with M.R. Kukrit Pramoj as the owner and editor.[4]
In 1996, Sands presented Tsuburaya Productions with a document claiming that he had ownership of the international rights of Ultraman, the Ultra Series before 1974, and Jumborg Ace. These were all the properties licensed to Chaiyo Productions by Tsuburaya to direct the films The 6 Ultra Brothers vs. the Monster Army and Jumborg Ace & Giant. He claimed they were turned over to him twenty years earlier in 1976 by the patriarch of the Tsuburaya brand, Noboru Tsuburaya, who died the year before.[5] While Chaiyo were licensed to create international material based on these licenses, they had also created original characters under the Ultraman name, starting a franchise called "Project Ultraman". Initially set to release films and television series under this name, they were ordered by Thailand courts to cease and desist anything they were doing outside of the original licenses in April 2007.[6] On November 20, 2017, a Los Angeles Federal Court ruled that Sands, nor his companies Chaiyo and UM Corporation, did not have ownership of the brand after a jury found that the 1976 document was not authentic.[7] The final judgement on April 18, 2018, forbids him and his companies to use the Ultra Franchise and all of its related characters, forcing him and the company to pay infringement damages.[8]
Sands died of cancer on 26 August 2021, at the age of 80.[1][9]
Films
Television films/ Series
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