Hantu Kak Limah Balik Rumah (2010)


Wow, two posts on one day after almost a half-year hiatus! Can my name and the word 'industrious' finally be uttered in the same breath without the universe imploding unto itself? This time I'd like to review the sequel to a movie I've reviewed earlier, Zombi Kampung Pisang. And frankly speaking, it is a movie I've been waiting for quite sometime considering how much I adored the campiness and enjoyed the humour of its predecessor. If you are wondering what Zombi is about, go read my review of it first. But don't worry, you do not need to watch Zombi to follow the story of Kak Limah.

Kak Limah tells about the return of Husin (Awie) to Kg Pisang from working abroad. Upon his return, he realises that a lot have changed since his departure. Usop the former cultural-dancer is now a paraplegic after a very tragic yet of course very comical mishap and Usop's sweetheart has had her heart broken by him one too many times. Oh, there's also a small matter of him seemingly living next door to the ghost of his neighbour, Kak Limah who is intent on haunting the villagers. Just like their previous run with zombies, this time the villagers of Kg Pisang will have to unite again in facing a horror of comedic proportions in Mamat Khalid's latest film.

The GOOD:
- there’s this running gag that is really funny in its suddenness and abruptness. Mamat knows this and he milks it for all it’s worth
The BAD:
1) the film is essentially a one-trick pony. A lot of the jokes are only mildly funny at best and they seem to drag
2) The love song in the middle of the movie. Although it’s quite nice to see Awie channelling his early 90’s Sembilu persona (complete with the hog and all), the sequence is simply awkward and it does not serve the plot in any way
3) The lack of talents. Zombi benefited from being an ensemble movie, with the job of carrying the movie shared equally among the lead actors and the cameos alike (man, my stomach hurt so MUCH from laughing so HARD at the late Loloque’s cameo as part of a hair-metal band who lost their way on the way to performing at a fun-fair). Whereas the main action of Kak Limah is more focused on Awie’s Husin, the disturbances from Kak Limah which he faces and also the sub-plot of him trying to win back his ex’s heart which I totally do not care about. Awie is fine as an actor in my opinion, but as a comedic actor he still has a lot to learn. Maybe Que Haidar asked for too much money for the sequel
4) As an extension of the previous point, Kak Limah seems to also lack the communal spirit previously portrayed in Zombi. I know there are scenes with the villagers in this film (including scene-stealing smaller characters such as the mini-bus driver and the FPS-obsessed, shotgun wielding boy) these scenes are not as numerous and the characters are not as diverse. I don’t know why, but I’ve always thought that Malay movies benefit from portraying the whole community as opposed to just portraying individuals alone. Not because they promote moral values or things like that, but I’ve always been drawn towards the festiveness and the cacophony generated in such movies such as U-Wei Shaari’s Isteri, Perempuan dan… and the late P Ramlee’s many movies
5) The ending of the movie seems to undo the whole message of this movie. I can’t say it explicitly without spoiling it for those of you who haven’t watched it. It’s enough for me to just say that it’s like attending a speech on Malay supremacy and rights delivered by Nazi Par… I mean PERKASA’s Ibrahim Ali only to have him say as conclusion that everything in this world belongs to God and nobody really has exclusive rights to anything

So my VERDICT for this movie is 5/10. I’ve seen better from Mamat Khalid, and this is proven by the good to bad points ratio that I’ve listed above. I'm disappointed, considering how good the first one was.
TRIVIA: In an interview with The Star during the movie's launch, Mamat jokingly remarked that he only made the movie because he was running out of money. After watching the movie, I'm not quite sure that his remark was just a joke.

Valhalla Rising (2009)


Hello imaginary readers. It's been awhile since I posted in this blog. Have been busy. I got myself a job (because even movie reviewers need money to eat, they don't simply subsist on sarcasm and sass) and a lot of other stuff. Well let's get straight to the point. Fortunately in my hectic schedule I still found time to watch movies so here is my review of the movie 'Valhalla Rising' which came out in 2009. This movie was directed by Nicolas Winding Refn and features Mads Mikkelsen as the main character One Eye; a laconic Viking warrior who follows a group of Crusaders who are on their way to the Holy Land.

Well to be honest, I was expecting a typical Viking movie with the whole plunder and pillage and the works that usually come with with movies which include Vikings. But boy was I wrong. This movie is quite slow and pays equal importance to the dialogue. But when it happens, boy it is violence, glorious violence. You get disembowelment, decapitation, impaling, eye-gouging, you name it, it has it. Which sort of explains the need for the slow pacing. You're all bored and yawning for something to please happen already, and then the pace picks up in a crescendo and you know some guy is gonna get stabbed in the eye and you squirm in your seat, expecting the wonderfully dreadful. Oh boy!

But I have to admit that at times this movie escapes my comprehension. The dream sequences are huge wtf to me and it took me a while to realise a major plot point.

The GOOD:
1) The violence is sickening and unabashed in this movie
2) Mikkelsen did a solid job in portraying such an effectively ruthless character without speaking any line

The BAD:
1) I don't get the movie. What's with the rouge dream sequences?
2) The ending. So, uh, that's all there is?

Moi VERDICT: I'm giving it 6/10 because I simply DON'T GET IT.