Sepet
Sepet Slit Eye | |
---|---|
Directed by | Yasmin Ahmad |
Written by | Yasmin Ahmad |
Produced by | Rosnah Kassim Elyna Shukri |
Starring | Ng Choo Seong Sharifah Amani Linus Chung Harith Iskander Ida Nerina Adibah Noor Tan Mei Ling Thor Kar Hoong |
Cinematography | Low Soon Keong |
Edited by | Affandi Jamaludin |
Release date |
|
Running time | 104 minutes |
Country | Malaysia |
Languages | English Malay Cantonese Hokkien (Min Nan) Mandarin |
Sepet (English: Slit Eyes) is a 2005 Malaysian Malay-language teen romantic comedy-drama film set in Ipoh, Malaysia. Directed by Yasmin Ahmad, it tells of a love that blooms between a Chinese boy and a Malay girl. Sepet is a Malay word which, in this context, refers to the 'slit eyes' of the Chinese.
Plot
[edit]19-year-old Ah Loong (who also called himself "Jason") is in charge of a market stall selling pirated VCDs, but is an incurable romantic with an unlikely hobby: he loves to read and write poetry. One day, his life takes a sudden turn one day when a Malay schoolgirl, Orked, comes to his stall looking for films starring her favourite actor, Takeshi Kaneshiro. Jason and Orked start a romantic relationship, although social and racial pressures stand in their way.
Jason is involved in a road accident while Orked is going to England to pursue her studies. In a post credits scene, Orked is shown sleeping beside Jason, both wearing a wedding ring.
Cast
[edit]- Choo Seong Ng as Jason aka Ah Loong
- Sharifah Amani as Orked
- Linus Chung as Keong
- Mei Ling Tan as Mah, Ah Loong's mother
- Ida Nerina as Mak, Orked's mother
- Harith Iskander as Abah, Orked's father
- Adibah Noor as Kak Yam
- Kar Hoong Thor as Pah, Ah Loong's father
- Zehan Marissa as Lin
Awards
[edit]Year | Award | Category | Recipients | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 18th Tokyo International Film Festival | Best Asian Film Award | Won[1] | |
Ninth Malaysian Video Awards | Best Film | Won | ||
27th Créteil International Women's Film Festival in France | Best Film | Won | ||
18th Malaysia Film Festival | Best Film | Won | ||
Best Original Screenplay | Yasmin Ahmad | Won | ||
Best Supporting Actress | Ida Nerina | Won | ||
Adibah Noor | Nominated | |||
Most Promising Actor | Ng Choo Seong | Won | ||
Most Promising Actress | Sharifah Amani | Won | ||
Best Poster | Won | |||
Best Director | Yasmin Ahmad | Won | ||
Best Supporting Actor | Harith Iskander | Nominated | ||
Best Editor | Affandi Jamaludin | Nominated | ||
Global Chinese Golden Arts Awards | Best Film | Won | ||
Anugerah Era | Best Film | Won |
Sequels
[edit]The sequel to Sepet, called Gubra, was filmed in Ipoh, Malaysia and released in 2006. The third movie in Yasmin Ahmad's Orked trilogy is a prequel to both Sepet and Gubra, titled Mukhsin.
Adaptations
[edit]Theatre company Liver & Lung debuted a musical adaptation of Sepet in September 2019. Shafeeq Shajahan directed the adaptation, with music and lyrics by Shajahan and Badrish.[2] The adaptation was a critical success, winning Best Direction at the BOH Cameronian Arts Awards in 2020.[3] Joshua Anthony Gui and Badrika Baluch played the roles of Jason and Orked in the adaptation, receiving positive reviews. Theatre critic website Critic Republic wrote that the musical had an "unexpected quality, where audiences all cried, laughed and smiled together."[4]
Songs from the musical were released on Spotify in July 2021, to celebrate Yasmin Ahmad's 12 year death anniversary.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ "18th Tokyo Film Festival 2005 : 22-30/10/2005 (TIFF) - Awards".
- ^ S, Bissme. "Putting Sepet on stage". thesun.my. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
- ^ Nathan, Lydia (1 July 2020). "BOH Cameronian Arts Awards 2020 goes online".
- ^ "Yearning for Yasmin, Sepet Stays Faithful". 3 December 2019.
- ^ "'Sayangku': theatre company set to release 'Sepet The Musical' soundtrack". The Star. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
External links
[edit]- Official site Archived 1 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- Sepet at IMDb
- 2005 films
- 2004 films
- Cantonese-language Malaysian films
- 2000s romantic comedy-drama films
- 2000s English-language films
- Films directed by Yasmin Ahmad
- Hokkien-language films
- Malay-language films
- 2000s Mandarin-language films
- Malaysian romantic comedy-drama films
- Films about interracial romance
- Films set in Malaysia
- Chinese-language Malaysian films
- Films with screenplays by Yasmin Ahmad
- 2004 comedy-drama films
- 2004 multilingual films
- Malaysian multilingual films