Fatima (1938 film)

Fatima

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Directed by
Produced by Tan Khoen Yauw
Written by Saeroen
Starring
Music by Lief Java
Cinematography
  • Joshua Wong
  • Othniel Wong
Production
company
Release date
  • April 24, 1938 (1938-04-24) (Dutch East Indies)
Country Dutch East Indies
Language Indonesian

Fatima is a 1938 film from the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) directed by Othniel and Joshua Wong. Written by Saeroen, it starred Roekiah, Rd Mochtar, and ET Effendi and followed two lovers who are disturbed by a rich youth. The film followed the same formula as the earlier hit Terang Boelan (Full Moon; 1937), and saw commercial success domestically. It is one of three films which Misbach Yusa Biran credits with reviving the domestic film industry, which had been faltering.

Plot

Fatima (Roekiah) is in love with Idris (Rd Mochtar), the son of a poor fisherman on the island of Motaro. One day, the rich youth Ali (ET Effendi) comes to the island and tries to steal Fatima's heart. She, however, is unwilling to receive him and gives his gifts to Idris, so that the latter can sell them. Ultimately it is revealed that Ali is the leader of a gang, and the police trace him through a stolen ring he had given Fatima.[1]

Production

The success of Albert Balink's Terang Boelan in 1937, released in a stagnant domestic film industry, led the Tan brothers (Khoen Yauw and Khoen Hian) to reestablish their production house Tan's Film.[2] For the company's first production, the Tans called the Wong brothers, Othniel and Joshua, to direct and handle daily activities with the company.[3] The Wongs, who had served as cinematographers for Terang Boelan but found themselves unemployed after the studio closed its feature film division, accepted. They also handled cinematography on Fatima, shooting in black-and-white.[4]

The Wongs brought with them much of cast of Terang Boelan, as well as some crew members. The previous film's writer, Saeroen, penned the story for Fatima, closely following the same formula of romance, good music, and beautiful scenery as his earlier film. The main cast members, including Roekiah, Rd Mochtar, and ET Effendi, as well as actors in minor roles like Kartolo (Roekiah's husband), also joined.[3] They were given higher wages than when they had worked on Terang Boelan. Roekiah, for example, earned a monthly fee of 150 gulden, with another 50 gulden for Kartolo; this was twice as much as she had earned previously.[5]

The film's backing music was provided by Lief Java, which played in the kroncong genre (traditional music with Portuguese influences). The film contained several songs, with vocals by Roekiah, Mochtar, Kartolo, Louis Koch, and Annie Landouw.[1]

Reception and legacy

Fatima was released on 24 April 1938, with marketing handled by the Tan brothers.[6] It was a commercial success, reportedly earning 200,000 gulden on a 7,000 gulden investment.[3] Most of the audience was native, although it reportedly interested Dutch viewers as well. A review in the daily Bataviaasch Nieuwsblad wrote that, although the film could not be judged by European standards, the performance by Roekiah was enjoyable and that the domestic cinema seemed "on the right track".[lower-alpha 1][6]

The Tans enjoyed the Fatima's success, but the Wongs were displeased with their percentage of its profits, which they considered too low.[7] Nonetheless, they continued to work with the Tans until the 1940,[7] and, in 1948, the Tans and Wongs established another production house.[8] Mocthar and Roekiah, meanwhile, remained the main stars of Tan's until Mochtar left the company in 1940 over a wage dispute.[9]

The Indonesian film historian Misbach Yusa Biran credits the triple successes of Terang Boelan, Fatima, and The Teng Chun's Alang-Alang (Grass, 1939) with reviving the local film industry.[10] Most domestic films made prior to Indonesian independence were produced between 1939 and the Japanese occupation in 1942.[11]

Fatima is likely a lost film. The American visual anthropologist Karl G. Heider writes that all Indonesian films made before 1950 are lost.[12] However, JB Kristanto's Katalog Film Indonesia (Indonesian Film Catalogue) records several as having survived at Sinematek Indonesia's archives, and Biran writes that several Japanese propaganda films have survived at the Netherlands Government Information Service.[13]

Footnotes

  1. Original: "... zich toch op den goeden weg schijnt te bevinden.

References

Works cited

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