Friday, 30 March 2012

How I became P. Ramlee's publisher

When I wrote 120 Malay Movies I tried to watch all of the 34 movies that P. Ramlee directed. I almost succeeded.

I even made sure to watch a rare screening of Gelora as part of a retrospective in Paris (the sexy noir is not available on VCD and is not shown on TV). So that's how I managed to watch 33 of the films.


Almost there. But my quest would never be complete. Because there is one film that is believed to be lost, forever. No one has seen it in decades. Even all the money of Sarawak Chief Minister Taib Mahmud (who is a huge P. Ramlee fan) cannot locate a single copy of the film.


And the film is Sitora Harimau Jadian (1964). It has simply been lost due to neglect.


It's sadly apt that this was the first film he directed in Kuala Lumpur; and its 'lost' status can be seen as an unfortunate foreshadow of how deleterious his KL years would prove to be for him. (When Malaysians wax nostalgic for the films of P. Ramlee, they inevitably wax nostalgic for Singapore, which is where the first 16 films he directed, from Penarik Beca (1955) to Tiga Abdul (1964), were made.)


Technically, Sitora Harimau Jadian wasn't supposed to have been well-made. Merdeka Studios in KL was simply not sufficiently equipped or financed to handle it. When a print was screened for Shaw Brothers in Singapore, the bosses walked out after a few minutes. But I spoke to Othman Hafsham who had seen it as a boy in 1964, and he remembered it as "scary" (in a good way, I presume).


Sitora Harimau Jadian would have been P. Ramlee's sole horror movie. (By contrast, Sumpah Orang Minyak was a horror movie only in its last quarter).


So 120 Malay Movies, the book, was released in late 2010, with no chapter on Sitora Harimau Jadian.


Fast forward a year.


An extremely helpful and enthusiastic ang moh, William Knox, runs The Penang Bookshelf. He wrote in his 1 October 2011 mailing-list (which I subscribe to, and which I recommend) that he would be getting almost 300 Malay books, some in Jawi, from the 1940s and 1960s. They were from "the collection of a Professor Rufus Hendon, a US linguist, who knocked about these parts between the 1940s and 1960s." This professor had bought not only text-books and several editions of Hikayat Abdullah, but he also collected pulp fiction. 


Here's how the covers look like. So I looked at that link and one title leapt out. See if you can guess which cover I mean:



Yes it's this one, in the north-east:


Hang on. A book BY P. Ramlee that was CALLED Sitora Harimau Jadian? I knew I had to have it. I sent an eager email to Mr. Knox and "reserved" a few of the books. I had no idea what would be IN the book, but I wanted it.


There were delays in getting the books shipped (from the US) and then catalogued here. It was nail-biting! So it was only on 5 March that I got hold of the four books I ordered. (This is not the space to talk about the other three.)


When I collected the Poslaju package, the first one I read was Sitora Harimau Jadian. As I had hoped, it was a novel based on the movie. Here's a sample:



The novel was published by Penerbitan Angkatan Baru in 1965. Copyright was assigned to P. Ramlee and only his name appears on the front or back cover. But the copyright page states that it is "di-cheritakan sa-mula oleh Zakaria Mohd Yassin". (Does anyone know how to get in touch with him, if he's still around?)


The novel definitely has a 'penceritaan semula' feel; reading it makes you feel like P. Ramlee is describing what happens in his movie, scene by scene. The book is slim, only 124 pages, and I'm glad it was also fleshed out with pictures from the movie (which might be the only chance we will ever get to 'see' it):


I read it in a few hours. And then had a crazy thought: What if I republished it?


The original publisher no longer exists. So I approached P. Ramlee's grandsons (who'd never seen or heard of the book). Luckily, they thought a reprint would be cool; and so the royalty payments would be going to Zakaria Nasir.


I got the novel scanned, retyped and had the spelling modernised. (Thanks to 22-year old Firliyani Jaar, who by sheer coincidence is the grandniece of one of P. Ramlee's contemporaries. S. Kadarisman.)


The story of the novel is diverting enough; it's about the apparently irreconcilable difference between superstition (tahyul) and medical science (as represented by the protagonist Dr. Effendi, played by P. Ramlee himself). It certainly helped to fill a crucial gap in my knowledge of P. Ramlee's filmography. 

Then again, if the film was as badly-made as had been reported (even the Publisher's note for the 1965 novel states that "P. Ramlee 'agak' kalah dalam perjuangan-nya") perhaps reading it would be a more satisfying experience.  We don't have to be distracted by dodgy make-up effects (especially when the transformation to become a weretiger [harimau jadian] takes place) or fight scenes without the benefit of convincing supporting actors. 

It will be published under an imprint of Buku Fixi, called Fixi Retro. The size will be smaller but the cover thicker, with a flap (like the original 1965 book). This is the 2012 cover by Teck Hee:



I hereby announce, ladies and gents, that the most famous Buku Fixi novelist is now P. Ramlee.The book will be available at next month's Pesta Buku Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur.You may join the fan-page here.


I thank William Knox, Melissa Saila, Suria Bakar, Zakaria Nasir, Zaidee Nasir, Firliyani Jaar, Julie Anne and Teck Hee for making this possible.

Alhamdulillah!

Thursday, 22 March 2012

Sebab sebenar KOPI tidak akan dicetak semula

Cop "Edisi Terhad" di kulit depan antologi cerpen KOPI bermaksud...jika sasaran kami betul ... kesemua 1,500 keping buku tomei-tomei ini akan habis dijual semasa Pesta Buku Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur (27 April - 6 Mei) nanti.

Ia sudahpun soldout online dan sedang laku gila di events sekitar Semenanjung Malaysia. Antara lokasi yang telah menjualnya dalam rangka JelajahLejenFixi ialah UiTM Shah Alam, UTP Tronoh, UTeM Melaka, USM Nibong Tebal, USM Kubang Kerian, dan (mulai esok) PKNS Shah Alam. Untuk mengetahui lokasi yang terkini, silalah folo @BukuFixi kat Twitter ye?

KOPI tak akan dicetak semula sebab kesemua keuntungan daripada jualannya sedang/akan disalurkan kepada pembikinan beberapa filem pendek. Beberapa pengarah baru ("baru" sini diertikan sebagai "belum buat filem feature") diminta pilih cerpen KOPI yang mereka ingin adaptasi, dan mereka kemudian diberi sedikit dana. Terpulang kepada mereka, berapa dekat mereka nak ikut jalan cerita dalam cerpen tersebut.

Setakat ni, 8 pengarah telah dikenalpasti. Dan 3 telahpun siap.

3 pertama yang siap ni akan ditayang lusa di pelancaran KOPI. Berikut adalah teaser:







Jadi, bila dah habis biayai kesemua (8) filem pendek nanti, tidak ada duit untuk KOPI dicetak semula. Voila!

Mungkin kesemua 8 ni akan digabung dalam satu DVD untuk dipasarkan.

Filem-filem pendek KOPI merupakan langkah pertama Buku Fixi ke dalam kancah perfileman. Langkah seterusnya bergantung kepada kudrat dan niat dan ringgit. Konsep filem-filem terbitan Fixi selari dengan konsep buku yang kami terbit: urban contemporary pulp fiction. Gitu.

Friday, 16 March 2012

2 novel Fixi yang pertama untuk 2012



(Sila klik di gambar untuk maklumat lanjut)

Ya konsep kulit depan berbeda dikit daripada 10 novel kami pada tahun 2011. Sebab apalah hidup tanya berhijrah sekali-sekala? (Tapi spine dan belakang dibiarkan konsisten dengan novel-novel tahun lepas. Untuk menggalakkan lagi fetisy pengumpul buku gitu.)

Desain kulit depan kalini dibuat terus oleh Teck Hee dan kami tidak gunakan jurugambar atau model. Beza Teck Hee dengan beberapa designer lain: dia akan membaca manuskrip penuh sebelum kemukakan cadangan konsep!

Bisik (judul asal: Distorsi) ialah sebuah psychological thriller yang kemas dan kinky oleh Syaihan Syafiq. Manakala Invasi (judul asal: Hero) ialah naratif ganas dan kekadang lucu pasal serangan alien; diharap Raja Faisal dapat membina following untuk novel-novel sai-fai tempatan yang tak banyak di pasaran (atau yang dibuat hanya untuk 'budak-budak').Terima kasih kepada kedua-dua penulis sebab memilih Buku Fixi untuk terbitkan novel mereka yang pertama!

Ada 4 lagi buku yang kami nak umumkan sebelum Pesta Buku Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur (27 April - 6 Mei) nanti. Tungguuuuu!

Saturday, 18 February 2012

KOPI - Antologi cerpen Fixi yang pertama

Kulit Depan:


 
Kata Pengenalan saya:

Dari usia remaja di alaf yang lalu hingga ke tahun 2011, saya ketagih sesuatu. Ketagihan itu tidak sihat dan saya sering cuba menghentikannya. Tiga kali cuba dan tiga kali gagal. Rupa-rupanya jawapannya ialah untuk mendapat bahan baru untuk dinikmati setiap hari; dan bahan itu adalah kopi.

Saya ingin tahu lebih tentang minuman yang adiktif ini. Ada orang yang akan pergi ke Wikipedia saja. Tapi yang bikin lebih intrig kepada saya: apakah cerita yang boleh direka oleh penulis-penulis Fixi mengenai kopi?


Pelawaan untuk menulis dihantar melalui emel pada 27 November 2011. Seminggu kemudian. hampir semua cerpen dalam buku ni siap ditulis! 'Kopi instan' yang tak sehebat kopi gourmet kah? Tapi adrenalin yang memungkinkan buku ni dihasilkan dengan kelajuan ni lebih kepada ghairah suatu 'quickie' — biarpun cepat berlalu, ia tetap menyegarkan.
 

Jemput!

Line-up:

KOPI 3 RASA : Shaz Johar
BERSAKSI KOPI : Dayang Noor
KOPI KOLA : Nadia Khan
KOPI, DONAT DAN BAYANG GADIS BERAMBUT HIJAU : Adib Zaini
CINTA KOPI : Gina Yap Lai Yoong
LUWAK DAN KRETEK : Ridhwan Saidi
KOPI PERCIK : Amal Hamsan
KAU KOPIKOKU : Dheepan Pranthaman
KOPI JANTAN KAW : Nik Adam Ahmad
CETHU : Nabila Najwa
BARISTA CINTA : Shafaza Zara Syed Yusof
HARI INDITIH : Asyraf Bakti
MALAM, DI MEJA TEMPAT KAU TERLENTOK : Hafiz Hamzah
RITUAL : Luc Abdullah
TANGAN BERULAT : Fadli Al-Akiti
VENTI : Redza Minhat
KOPI JULIA : Faizal Sulaiman
SECANGKIR KOPI BERSAMA DIA : Syaihan Syafiq
KOPI MIMPI : Raja Faisal

KOPI dicetak 1,500 keping khusus untuk jualan online dan di events seperti pesta buku. Memang target ialah untuk soldout semasa kami di PWTC (27 April - 6 Mei) untuk Pesta Buku Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur nanti.

KOPI tidak akan dijual di kedai. Antara sebabnya: tauke kedai sendiri kasitau saya tahun lepas, "Cerpen mana laku. Orang nak novel jewww!"

Ironik. Sebab format cerpen itu sendiri amat relevan dengan zaman ADD kini. Tapi untuk berdekad, imej 'cerpen' di Malaysia telah dipalit oleh unsur didaktik/dakwah/patriotik yang menyebabkan ia dianggap boring.

KOPI ialah salah satu usaha untuk menunjukkan cerpen ni syok sebenarnya.

Pre-order untuk KOPI dah bermula! Kalau di Malaysia boleh order kat Fixi. Kalau di luar Malaysia boleh order di Amazon.

Kalau sudi, folo perkembangan terkini di Facebook KOPI.  

Majlis pelancaran KOPI ialah 24 Mac nanti sempena Art for Grabs di The Annexe, Central Market KL. Kami juga akan tayangkan beberapa filem pendek yang terinspirasi daripada cerpen-cerpen dalam buku nih. Jemput tonton juga!

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Box-office figures for Malaysian films in 2011

1.  KL Gangster - RM11.74 million
2. Ombak Rindu - RM10.9 million
3. Hantu Bonceng - RM8.53 million
4. Kongsi - RM8.1 million
5. Khurafat - RM8.08 million
6. Nasi Lemak 2.0 - RM7 million (estimated)
7. Hikayat Merong Mahawangsa - RM6.5 million
8. Nur Kasih - RM4.93 million
9. Bini-Biniku Gangster - RM4.71 million
10. Great Day - RM4.5 million (estimated)
11. Karak - RM4.3 million
12. Suatu Malam Kubur Berasap - RM4.07 million* 
13. Homecoming - RM4 million
14. Raya Tak Jadi - RM3.64 million
15. Alamak Toyol - RM3.47 million
16. Petaling Street Warriors - RM3.4 million (estimated)
17. Aku Bukan Tomboy - RM2.55 million
18. Al Hijab - RM2.24 million
19. Songlap - RM2.13 million
20. Sekali Lagi - 2.04 million
21. Flat 3A - RM1.44 million
22. Misteri Jalan Lama - RM1.33 million
23. Sini Ada Hantu - RM1.3 million
24. Kembar Siang - RM1.2 million
25. Klip 3GP - RM1.14 million
26=Cun - RM1.1 million
26=Senjakala - RM1.1 million
28. Senario the Movie: Ops Pocot - RM1.06 million
29. Rasuk - 1.03 million
30. 321 Cinta - RM980,000
31.Libas - RM930,000
32. Papa I Love You - RM890,000*
33. Penunggu Istana - RM890,000
34. Seru - RM870,000
35. Haq - RM800,000
36. Tolong! Awek Aku Pontianak - RM760,000
37.Dilarang Masuk - RM750,000
38.... Dalam Botol - RM570,000
39. Momok Jangan Panggil Aku - RM550,000
40. Datin Ghairah - RM350,000
41. Sumpahan Puaka - RM310,000
42. Karipap-Karipap Cinta - RM280,000
43. Abuya - RM210,000
44. Ratu - RM200,000
45=Toyol Nakal - RM190,000
45=Apa Tengok-Tengok - RM190,000

* Still showing 

Gambar daripada sini ; chomel kan?

Sunday, 18 December 2011

OMBAK RINDU and PETALING STREET WARRIORS

First off: I enjoyed both Ombak Rindu and Petaling Street Warriors. And they come from different strands of Malaysian cinema.

Ombak Rindu (although it's based on a romantic potboiler novel) reminded me most of the films written by Hamzah Hussin and directed by M. Amin: Rumah Itu Dunia Aku (1963), Dosa Wanita (1967) and Sial Wanita (1969). In all of these, a virtuously suffering young heroine has terrible things done to her by Fate (in general) and a Scheming Older Bitch (in particular). The fact that the heroine is willing to endure torment for most of the movie's running time is meant to make us not only admire her fortitude but appreciate the cathartic ending even more. Thus, Ombak Rindu is a perverse paean to female masochism.

(Malay women love movies in which women get emotionally abused. Malay men don't notice, as they're too busy watching TV wrestling shows in which men get physically abused.)

There's a car-chase sequence in Ombak Rindu that recalls the end of Madu 3, but I couldn't help noticing how much freer the kebaya-wearing women in the 1964 movie were compared to the Western-garbed or tudung-clad ones in 2011. Have superficial Westernisation and Islamisation (both of which are imported values; our ancestors were neither mat salleh nor Arabs) had such a diminishing impact?


In contrast to the sentimental solipsism of Ombak Rindu is Petaling Street Warriors, which affirms that Malaysian cinema in the Chinese language is much more interested to talk about 'Malaysia' than our Malay-language cinema is. 

Although a kinetic fight sequence at the end becomes a catalogue of Chinese pop cinema (such as 黃飛鴻 and 李小龍), Petaling Street Warriors actually reminded me of the robust iconoclasm of Ali Baba Bujang Lapok. Even before the cameo by 孫文 / 孫逸仙, the movie was effortlessly political as it flipped about notions of citizenship and governance. There are even 'illegal' gatherings, and therefore terribly topical.

It's not as frisky and knockabout as Nasi Lemak 2.0 (the movie it would most likely be compared to), but it shows that a mish-mash of pop genres, when handled with wit and verve, can be utterly zany and utterly serious at the same time.


The closing scenes of both movies are significant. Ombak Rindu offers a bumigeois fantasy on a yacht (where I am sure the champagne is halal). The end of Petaling Street Warriors is in the spirit of democratic optimism: it's only when we give up inherited privileges that we can truly live (together).

I am glad I saw these two movies as a double-bill, in the spirit of 1Malaysia or 2Malaysia or oh well whatever nevermind.

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Nominations for Poster Terbaik, the most important category of Festival Filem Orang Melayu






This annual event, which presumptuously calls itself Festival Filem Malaysia, looks even more parochial this year because the two most interesting films are shut out from the main nominations due to not being at least 70% in the Malay language.

The best local film of 2011 was the humane and transcendent Great Day, and the most contentious/frisky was Nasi Lemak 2.0. In normal circumstances, these two would have had several nominations each. But since they're mostly in Chinese, we are forced instead to pretend that the films which exist to shore up what passes for the Malay star system are not only worthier but more 'Malaysian'.

As for the posters: I don't think the winner is as clear-cut as the Histeria and Belukar of previous years. I think Dalam Botol is conceptually the strongest (it tells a story) but the red borders diminish its visual impact. So I'd say Hikayat Merong Mahawangsa is the one that stands out.