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Title Director Cast Genre Notes 1980: Bandish: Pintar Pintar Bodoh: Arizal: Warkop: Comedy: Ratapan Anak Tiri 2: Drama: 1981: A Balinese Trance Seance: Dalan lingkaran cinta
Samarang (film) Samiun dan Dasima; Sawo Matang; Selamat Berdjuang, Masku! Serangan Fajar; Serigala Terakhir; Sexy Killers; Si Buta Lawan Jaka Sembung; Sing to the Dawn (2008 film) Soeara Berbisa; Son of Kong; The Spiral Road; Sri Asih (1954 film) Stone Age Warriors; The Story of Dr. Wassell; Suster Keramas
The film industry is currently the fastest-growing subsector of Indonesia's creative economy. [12] The number of moviegoers in the country were more than 52 million in 2019. In 2023, the local film industry in Indonesia set a new record with 20 films attracting over 1 million viewers each. [13] The Indonesian film industry released 230 films in ...
Suzzanna was a major film star in the 1970s and 1980s for her work in horror films. She appeared in 42 films before her death in 2008, including Bernafas dalam Lumpur [ id ] , Beranak dalam Kubur [ id ] and Sundel Bolong .
The film has been watched by 6.3 million people. It is the best-selling Indonesian film of 2018 and the second best-selling Indonesian film of all time, just behind Warkop DKI Reborn: Jangkrik Boss! Part 1 with 6.8 million viewers. [7] The film is followed by a sequel, Dilan 1991, which was released on 28 February 2019.
The Foreign Language Film Award Committee oversees the process and reviews all the submitted films. Following this, they vote via secret ballot to determine the five nominees for the award. The Indonesian submissions are selected by Persatuan Produser Film Indonesia (English: Indonesian Motion Picture Producers Association). [8]
Tenggelamnya Kapal Van der Wijck was the highest grossing Indonesian film of 2013 with over 1.7 million admissions. [5] The film was nominated for five awards including, Best Actor in Leading Role for Herjunot Ali, Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Reza Rahadian, and Best Adapted Screenplay, and won one award for Best Visual Effects in the 2014 Indonesian Film Festival. [6]
The first film produced in colonial era was a silent fiction Loetoeng Kasaroeng (1926), who was based from Lutung Kasarung, a community legend from Parahyangan. [1] It was sometimes credited as the first film of Indonesian cinema, and the first colonial film to feature a native-Indonesian cast from priyayi noble, who was the relative of ...