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Sorry Guys, But It’s Time To Bring Up U-Wei’s ‘Hanyut’ Again
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Sorry Guys, But It’s Time To Bring Up U-Wei’s ‘Hanyut’ Again

by Deric EctJuly 21, 2015

Who here still remembers Hanyut?

RM18 million. That is the budget of this as-yet-unreleased film directed by U-Wei Haji Saari.

Before we officially begin, here’s a quick recap: Hanyut is the U-Wei Haji Saari film produced by Tanah Licin, a venture set up by U-Wei himself and producer Julia Fraser.

The massively-budgeted film has a cast consisting of Peter O’Brien, Sofia Jane, Diana Danielle, Khalid Salleh, Adi Putra, Bront Palarae, Alex Komang, James Corley and many others.

Hanyut was never released in Malaysia; fans are still awaiting a proper announcement from the team.

Hanyut takes place in 19th century Malaysia, when the land was still under the rule of colonists.

It all began many, many years ago, back in 2009.

Hanyut first made ripples in the blogosphere six years ago, when news of the production surfaced. Back then, production house Tanah Licin was still casting for the film, announcing roles to fill through a (now-defunct) website called Finding Nina.

Finding Nina aimed to literally find Nina, one of the lead characters in Hanyut. Nina is Almayer’s daughter – the team stated in the casting call they were looking for a “young beautiful woman, ages from 19 -25 years old, who has the look of being mixed race (Pan-Asian)”. The role later went to Diana Danielle.

The website which was used to cast actors in Hanyut.

Media outlets soon picked up on the news and Hanyut made headlines throughout the years that followed. Pictures taken of U-Wei and his team down at Kuala Lipis and Pekan on reccie in December 2009 were posted up by Cinema Online in May 2010.

Filming took place in 2010, over a period of 10 weeks from May to July. , which managed to catch several minutes of Hanyut at the (also now-defunct) Maskara Shorties in August 2010 described the film as a showcase of U-Wei at the “top of his form”.

What was released from the project over the years looked promising, so we waited and waited as the film got pushed further and further back. Two of Hanyut’s actors have already passed away, namely Alex Komang and Ramli Hassan.

The cast of Hanyut was made up of Malaysian, Indonesian, Australian and British actors.

The film received only one official release: it greeted audiences in Indonesia where it played in over 100 cinemas as Gunung Emas Almayer. It was also screened on a smaller scale in various venues around the world to highly positive reviews.

As of now, it looks like the film will never see the light of day. Social media promotion for the film has practically ceased, and we sympathize with whoever’s in charge of their account.

Based on hearsay, we can tell you that U-Wei has started work on his next project and there are no plans to release the film wide in the future. Why? We’ll leave it to the Tanah Licin team to tell us someday.

According to Aref Omar’s piece in the New Straits Times in November last year, Hanyut was funded through “a creative industry loan of RM10 million from Bank Simpanan National (BSN), a grant of RM6 million from the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MOSTI) and a grant of RM2 million by National Film Development Corporation of Malaysia (FINAS)“.

In any case, whatever the reason for the delay, we want to watch Hanyut and we won’t rest until we do.

So we asked around for thoughts on the film’s delayed release.

Maybe, just maybe, some of the fans could have decent solutions to propose. How can we obtain a copy of the film without breaking into U-Wei and Julia’s homes?

First and foremost, Wendi Sia of The Daily Seni wants to put forward her two cents.

According to Wendi, a humble nationwide tour of the film will please the fans as well as followers of U-Wei’s career. She also thinks that it could resuscitate interest for a major release later down the line, once word of mouth gets in place.

We then asked Bernard Kung, soon-to-be Pegawai Tadbir Dan Diplomatik, currently undergoing training in INTAN. He was the die-hard fan who wanted us to buka balik this cerita because he’s quite tired of the wait.

If it is indeed true that U-Wei is waiting for even more funds to promote the film as reported in The Star, we wouldn’t rule out a crowdfunding campaign. This could also double as a reliable gauge for anticipation as well as replenish the hype.

Crowdfunding is one of those highly popular buzzwords you’ve been hearing a lot in the past 3 years – just last year a man got $55,000 from Kickstarter to make potato salad.

Third, we revisited our discussion with Grace Chin who shared with us her thoughts on FINAS director-general Kamil Othman‘s appearance at The Cooler Lumpur Festival this year. Kamil was part of a discussion titled Where Is the Great Malaysian Movie? A Conversation with Kamil Othman which promised no-holds-barred conversations on Malaysian cinema.

Grace has worked with creative producers in Malaysia, and she agreed with Kamil on the role of producers in filmmaking, singling out Malaysians such as Nandita Solomon (Bunohan, upcoming thriller Interchange) and Sharon Gan (Lelaki Harapan Dunia) who have built quite a reputation as dependable forces in the profession.

Taking her words into account, we felt that the anger towards Hanyut‘s delay has often been misfired, frequently aimed towards U-Wei and FINAS when in reality both parties were merely responsible for the artistic and financial side of things. Shouldn’t it be the producer who is in the hot seat when films get pushed back like in this particular instance?

Hanyut‘s producer is Julia Fraser, who prior to this collaborated with U-Wei on Buai Laju-Laju. She’s no unknown; Julia shares a Golden Globe with producer Julie LeBrocquy and director Siddiq Barmat for Osama, the Afghan film released back in 2003. She has moved to Singapore recently.

What exactly does a producer do? To what extent is a producer responsible for when it comes to releasing a film in cinemas? We’ll have answers to these questions soon, so keep an eye on our site in the meantime.

Is it ethical for a developing country to spend RM18 million on a movie?

Given the imminent furore over Hanyut’s budget should it continue being put on indefinite hold, we want people to think about the financial aspect of things.

How much public funding should go to filmmaking?

Malaysia is a developing country with a number of disparities – education, income and healthcare come to mind – and there are plenty of avenues that need work. You can do quite a lot with the RM8 million in grants that went to Hanyut (which is a mere 0.3% of the RM2.6 billion that went towards 1MDB).

Also worth considering is the fact that the number one film of all-time at the local box office is The Journey, which made RM17.17 million.

Even if Hanyut made this much at the box office, it would still incur a significant loss once you take into account that only about half of box office takings go to the filmmakers (the other half goes to the cinema). For Hanyut to be able to break even based on domestic cinema alone it would have needed RM36 million at the box office – more than twice what The Journey managed.

This brings us to a series of questions: was the decision by the government to award this amount of money unsupervised to a production made in the best interest of the rakyat? Was there nobody from BSN, MOSTI or FINAS checking in from time to time, making sure that the movie will eventually be released to box offices? Is there anybody accountable at all for the never-ending delay or will there be zero repercussions if the film never gets released?

We needed someone to indulge us in this line of thought on ethics so we spoke to writer and freelance video editor Sebastian Ng who had some strong words.

We shall leave you with his thoughts and we look forward to hearing yours as well.


Got anything to add, debunk or explain? Just drop us a comment on this page (all comments are moderated so expect between 1-6 hours for them to appear on the site, but we’re a fairly permissive bunch) and e-mail us anything interesting or useful at !

About The Author
Profile photo of Deric Ect
Deric Ect
Deric is contributor and former managing editor of The Daily Seni.
7 Comments
  • July 21, 2015 at 3:11 pm

    “Two of Hanyut’s actors have already passed away, namely Alex Komang and Harun Salim Bachik”
    – Harun Salim Bachik acted in Hanyut? should be Ramli Hassan.

    “You can do quite a lot with the RM8 million in grants that went to Hanyut”
    – RM18 million?

    • Profile photo of Deric Ect
      Deric Ect
      July 21, 2015 at 3:31 pm

      Thank you so much for pointing that out, Khys, no idea how Harun Salim Bachik even got in there! His spirit lives on.

  • July 21, 2015 at 3:20 pm

    “You can do quite a lot with the RM8 million in grants that went to Hanyut”
    – i read again and got it (RM8m grants, RM10m loan), thanks!

  • Dins
    November 22, 2016 at 11:18 am

    Well there is a lot that can be done with RM 6 million worth of grants. I don’t really get how MOSTI got into the pic in the first place. Probably some innovative ideas he had by adapting someone else’s novel seems rewarding to the so called Science agency.

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