1: 36 by young direc­tor Nawa­pol Tham­ron­gratt­a­na­rit con­sists of 36 sin­gle sta­tic shots cor­re­spon­ding to the roll of films in the ana­lo­gue still came­ra of the film­ma­ker.
2: Befo­re each shot the num­ber of the sce­ne appears on the screen and one sen­tence con­fu­sing, enri­ching or com­men­ting the shot.
3: Some­ti­mes a sen­tence refers to a sce­ne to come or one of the pre­vious scenes.
4: The sto­ry is about a loca­ti­on scout who loses all her pho­tos taken of one sin­gly year she saved on a hard disc.
5: One of them show­ed her tog­e­ther with an art direc­tor she lik­ed very much.
6: It is a high­ly poe­ti­cal love-sto­ry set in a digi­tal age whe­re memo­ries are saved on hard discs and are threa­ten to dis­ap­pear in the very moment you cap­tu­re them.
7: Its for­ma­li­stic con­sis­ten­cy feels like a libe­ra­ting pri­son as the direc­tor denies plot infor­ma­ti­on by having it hap­pen off-screen and deli­vers a deep­ly per­so­nal point-of-view on the world.
8: At the same time a tacky score gives a stran­ge fee­ling of being hap­py after visi­ting your love and going down in an ele­va­tor whe­re lounge music plays.
9: Tham­ron­gratt­a­na­rit finds an asto­nis­hing and uni­que voice tal­king about a digi­tal gene­ra­ti­on and may­be makes one of the first films por­tray­ing that gene­ra­ti­on in a silent way.
10: He forces you to look at the world ins­tead of just con­sum­ing it, just like when the art direc­tor tells the loca­ti­on scout that she should watch the beau­tiful bird in the sky with her eyes befo­re taking a photo.
11: It is like going to Mari­en­bad once again and brin­ging your came­ra, but when you want to show someone that you have been the­re ever­y­thing will be erased.
12: Silence.
13: This review is writ­ten by Patrick Holz­ap­fel and the cre­dits appear in the midd­le of the film.
14: Still silence.
15: Every shot is like an era­sed pho­to­gra­phy that slow­ly beg­ins to move.
16: Form and con­tent kiss each other until black­ness overs­ha­dows their emotions.
17: Its for­ma­li­stic con­sis­ten­cy feels a litt­le bit over­coo­ked, never lea­ving free­dom to cha­rac­ters or 
sto­ry but rather giving all the power to a concept.
18: Ber­tolt Brecht would have loved it except for the last shot whe­re sud­den­ly fee­lings and sad­ness take control.
19: But tho­se fee­lings do not come out of not­hing, they are the result of melan­cho­ly that trans­port as well in digi­tal images as in ana­lo­gue images.
20: Digi­ta­lism could ser­ve as a meta­phor for the lack of fee­ling in real live, the disa­bi­li­ty to real­ly touch things just like when the view on cha­rac­ters is blo­cked or film­ed through a frame.
21: Playful,
22: but dedi­ca­ted to rea­li­ty “36” shows extra­cts of dai­ly life, with small-talk and small observations.
23: You might find yours­elf drif­ting away becau­se the film makes you for­get about time just like a regu­lar visit on facebook.
24: Its for­ma­li­stic con­sis­ten­cy is hea­vi­ly inspi­ring, show­ing a direc­tion whe­re movies might head in the future.
25: Even the loca­ti­ons reflect the topic of past and pre­sent like an old ruin of a for­mer motel whe­re one can still find con­doms on the floor.
26: Tham­ron­gratt­a­na­rit even heads back to places the movie has been befo­re show­ing small chan­ges like the lack of one requi­si­te chan­ging ever­y­thing about the place.
27: The­r­e­fo­re it is also a film about absence.
28: A few shots of peo­p­le sit­ting in front of com­pu­ters give the uncan­ny fee­ling of a mir­ror for the audience.
29: Do not move, you are a movie!
30: In a kind of meta-twist the lost pic­tures resem­ble the film itself.
31: Due to that a stran­ge quest for “36” lies deep in the heart of “36”.
32: It is as if the film is afraid of being dele­ted after it has been finished.
33: A dys­to­pian, roman­tic rea­li­ty of film emer­ges out of the shots that some­ti­mes appear to be stills.
34: Its for­ma­li­stic con­sis­ten­cy is more than just for­ma­lisms as it depicts the rea­li­ty of a world bom­bed with digi­tal images whe­re it beco­mes incre­asing­ly hard to dif­fer bet­ween beau­tiful and ugly, important and banal, memo­ry and image.
35: I am afraid that I have for­got­ten something.
36: Don’t dele­te my review, please.