fbpx
Wikipedia

Cinema of Malaysia

The cinema of Malaysia consists of feature films produced in Malaysia, shot in the languages Malay, Mandarin, Cantonese, Tamil, various indigenous languages, and English.

Cinema of Malaysia
No. of screens185,997 seats (2017)
1,094 screens (2017)
151 indoor cinemas (2017)[1][2]
 • Per capita183 seats per screen (2013)
3.5 screens per 100,000 inhabitants (2015)
4.6 indoor cinemas per 1,000,000 inhabitants (2013)[1]
Main distributorsSkop Productions
Astro Shaw
Animonsta Studios [3]
Produced feature films (2019)[4][2]
Total59
Number of admissions (2017)[5][2]
Total72,840,000
National films4,520,000 (6.2%)
Gross box office (2017)[5][2]
TotalRM984 million
US$246 million
National filmsRM57.6 million (5.9%)

Malaysia produces about 60 feature films annually, and between 300–400 television dramas and serials a year apart from the in-house productions by the individual television stations. The country also holds its own annual national level film awards, known as the Malaysia Film Festival. There are about 150 cinemas and cineplexes in Malaysia, showing not only local films but also foreign films. Foreign film producers are welcome to shoot on location in Malaysia, undertake film co-production ventures so that local artistes and technicians have the opportunity of gaining exposure and experience. Currently, here are some internationally famous Malaysian actors such as Michelle Yeoh and Henry Golding.

Early films, 1933–41

Malaysian cinema began in 1933 with Leila Majnun, based on a classical Persian story of two ill-fated lovers. Directed by B.S. Rajhans and produced by the Singapore-based Motilal Chemical Company of Bombay, the cast was derived from a local opera group. Observing the success of this project, two brothers, Run Run and Run Me Shaw, were prompted in 1937 to import some equipment from Shanghai and start the production of Malay films from their small studio at Ampas Road in Singapore. However, they only managed to produce five or six movies prior to the Japanese invasion in 1941.

Under Japanese colonial rule, 1941–45

In 1941, when the Japanese occupied Malaya, the first Japanese film companies found local film production to be extremely limited. The exhibition market was dominated by overseas Chinese companies, namely, the Shaw Brothers. The Japanese would later use Malaya for exactly the same purposes, even obtaining the help of the Shaws to break into their extensive Southeast Asian film exhibition network.[6] Although Malaya never became a major film production center under the Japanese, it was a strategically important film market for Japan and a convenient outpost for moving films into and out of Southeast Asia.

The Japanese film studios shot a number of films in Shonan (what the Japanese renamed Singapore during the occupation) depicting the area in similar ways to the Japanese frontier. Films such as Southern Winds II (続・南の風, 1942, Shochiku Studios), Tiger of Malay (マライの虎, 1942, Daiei Studios) or Singapore All-Out Attack (シンガポール総攻撃, 1943, Daiei Studios) presented the area as an exotic land rich in resources, occupied by simple but honest people.[7] Japanese colonial films also associated the region with sex as many 'Karayuki-san', or prostitutes, had been either sold to brothels or chosen to go to Southeast Asia to earn money around the turn of the century. Karayuki-san (からゆきさん, 1937, Toho Studios), Kinoshita Keisuke's Flowering Port (花咲く港, 1943, Shochiku Studios), and later, Imamura Shohei's Whoremonger (女衒, 1987, Toei Studios), which were all or at least partly shot on location, are examples of the extent to which this subgenre dominates the representations of Malaya in Japanese cinema.[8]

Development and decline, 1945–75

Following the end of World War II in 1945, the Shaw Brothers resumed production in 1947 with a Rajhans-directed film called Singapura Di Waktu Malam (Singapore by Night) starring Siput Sarawak. Backed by their chain of theatres, which they either owned or rented, the film enjoyed a good response. The Shaw Brothers proceeded to produce more films and introduced new faces, including the Sumatran-born Kasma Booty. Her first film, Cempaka, revolved around the life of a native island girl.

In 1948, P. Ramlee - who later became one of the foremost figures in Malay cinema, made his debut in the film Cinta (Love). Ramlee’s talents in music composing and singing brought him prominence. He was very versatile as a leading actor, a comic, dramatic artiste, scriptwriter and film director. Most of his early films carried plenty of singing and dancing scenes, a trend introduced by Indian film directors. After Rajhans, Shaw Brothers imported many other Indian film directors, among them S. Ramanathan, K.R. Seetharama Sastry, Phani Majumdar and D. Ghoss. There were also some local film directors such as L. Krishnan and K. M. Bashker who learned the trade and techniques through experience and apprenticeship. By the 1960s, many of the expatriates were replaced by local directors.

The success enjoyed by the Shaw Brother’s film studio, known as the Malay Film Productions (MFP), encouraged a few other entrepreneurs to venture into the same business, as was the case with the Nusantara film company, started in 1951 by Hsu Chiu Meng. However, he depended heavily on independent theatres, and after producing about a dozen films, Nusantara closed down in 1954.

In 1952, Ho Ah Loke opened a studio on Tampines Road, Singapore, calling his company Rimau Film Productions, later to be known as Keris Film Productions. Ho owned a few small theatres through his earlier venture as a film distributor. He managed to produce a number of films, and in 1956 merged with Cathay Organisation, owned by millionaire Loke Wan Tho. The company was renamed Cathy-Keris Film Productions with its studio on East Coast Road, Singapore. Supported by their own theatre chain throughout Malaya and Singapore, Cathay-Keris films posed a challenge to the films produced by Shaw’s MFP studios. Shaw studios produced about ten films a year, while Cathay-Keris too produced about the same number.

During those early years, all the films were in black and white. The studios had their own laboratories, recording and editing facilities. Direct sound recording was the practice from the beginning, until the advent of the 1960s. Then, post-synching or dubbing systems appeared and are still in use today.

Screenplays were mostly based on folk tales, stage plays, and legends of fictional or real historical heroes or events. MFP made Hang Tuah in 1956, about the legendary Melaka warrior Hang Tuah who lived during the heyday of the Melaka Sultanate. It was done in Eastman Color and directed by Indian Phani Majumdar, who was specially brought in to ensure that the film made it to the East Asia Film Festival. P. Ramlee acted as Hang Tuah and also composed the background music, for which the film won an award. In response, Cathay-Keris produced Hang Jebat, about Hang Tuah’s closest friend who becomes involved in a life-or-death struggle with him.

Just before they ceased operations, both MFP and Cathay-Keris produced three colour films each. Shaw Brothers’ produced Ribut (Storm), Hang Tuah and Raja Bersiong (The Fanged King). The latter, a legend from the state of Kedah, was written by Malaysia’s first Prime Minister, the late Tunku Abdul Rahman. Cathay-Keris produced Buluh Perindu (The Magic Flute), Cinta Gadis Rimba (The Virgin Of Borneo) and Mahsuri (The Maid of Langkawi), another Kedah legend written by Tunku Abdul Rahman.

Although many companies emerged, such as Nusantara Films, Tan & Wong Film Company, Rimau Productions and Cathay-Keris, many closed down due to escalating production costs and diminishing audiences, leaving only MFP and Cathay-Keris both operating in Singapore.

In 1961, H.M. Shah bought over a piece of prime land on the fringe of Kuala Lumpur and turned it into Merdeka Studio. It had a meager beginning, but once the top stars started their exodus from the two Singapore studios, its growth surged dramatically. Located adjacent to the National Zoo on Hulu Kelang Road, it is 13 kilometres from the city. Today, it is the headquarters of the National Film Development Corporation, Malaysia (FINAS). The Shaw Brothers dispatched some of their Singapore film directors, among them L. Krishnan, P. Ramlee, Salleh Ghani, Jamil Sulong, Omer Rojik, S. Kadarisman, Sudarmaji, Naz Achnas, M. Amin and Jins Shamsuddin, to make films at Merdeka.

Renaissance, 1975–present

In 1975, a renaissance prompted a revitalised growth when Sabah Films grossed huge profits with its maiden offering, Keluarga Comat (Comat’s Family). Soon, other companies mushroomed, such as Perfima, Syed Kechik, Indra, Jins Shamsuddin, and others.

The 1980s saw numerous changes. A vital one was the setting up FINAS in 1981 to develop and stimulate the growth and maintain the standards of the film industry by various means, including the provision of research and advisory services. FINAS has since set up numerous facilities to promote the industry, including a credit facility scheme which enables young film-makers to test their potential. The revival in the industry also made changes to certain formats of the local film productions. Nearly all the films were made in colour, some using the scope format and some the standard format. There were no fixed salaries for artists attached to a certain company or studio. A company can only do two of three functions: production, distribution or exhibition, to avoid a monopoly by a certain party. The producers also might be able to recover part of their investment by the return of the entertainment tax as a way of incentive. A further incentive to local film-makers is that they are invited to make television programmes either in film format or video format. As a result, there are now more than 300 film companies registered with FINAS.

In 1989 and 1990, over 20 feature films were produced, a number that decreased to 15 in 1995, but still more than the five feature films made in 1985. In the mid-2000s, Malaysian film industry saw an increase in number of domestic film production, from only seven films in 1999, to 26 films in 2009. The increase of domestic film production is because of new opening of cinemas and limitations on the screening of foreign films in local cinemas. Currently, the Malaysian film industry faces competition from surrounding regional cinemas such as those from Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and India.

In 2007, Tan Chui Mui's Love Conquers All won a Tiger Award at the 36th International Film Festival Rotterdam. In 2008, Liew Seng Tat's Flower in the Pocket also won a Tiger Award at the 37th International Film Festival Rotterdam. In 2011, over 40 films were released in Malaysia.[9] In 2012, FINAS cooperated with Skim Wajib Tayang to allow 2 local films to be screened at local cinemas every week, effective on 24 May, to solve the delay of screening faced by local film industry.[10] As such, in 2012, 70 films queued up to be shown in Malaysia nationwide.

During the global pandemic, cinemas were closed for up to a year beginning around March 2020 till late September 2021.[11] In the July 2022, the resurgence of cinema attendance was evidence by the high attendance for Mat Kilau: Kebangkitan Pahlawan ('Mat Kilau: The Rise of a Warrior') directed by Syamsul Yusof, in which he was reported to claim 'earned RM53mil in 13 days', thus earning the historical epic as the highest grossing Malaysian film of all-time.[12]

Category 18+ films

At the beginning of Malaysian film industry, while watching movies, there were no age restrictions, and films were done under strict guidelines. For instance, no sex scenes and crimes were permitted. Malaysian film classification was introduced in 1996 to provide parents of minors a chance to prevent their children from being exposed to inappropriate materials. There are four 18+ categories used in Malaysia, unlike other countries, which only used one classification for each age. These are 18PA, 18PL, 18SG and 18SX, however, 18PA is rarely used. Movies prior to 1996 also carry ratings, and some of the local movies prior to 1996 later carry 18+ ratings, for example, Mekanik (1983) (later rated 18SX) and Pelumba Malam (1989) (later rated 18PL). Two of the earlier local movies with 18+ ratings since its introduction, Litar Kasih (1996) and Panas (1998), were both classified 18SX. However, these movies still enjoyed surprising box office successes in Malaysia.

Non-Malay language cinema

Malaysian films are also produced in Tamil language and Mandarin. Examples include Malaysia's most successful action thriller film franchise, Heads Up Fighters. A Malaysian Tamil film titled Jagat won the best Malaysian film in year 2016.

New Films Classification

On 29 March 2012, the Film Censorship Board of Malaysia released new colour-coded logo designs for cinema films' classification. U or 'Umum' is now blue, which meant that the film can be watched by all ages and consists of what the Board deems positive depictions of values. P13 or 'Penjaga 13' is yellow, which signifies that caution should be taken when watching the film as it is not suitable for individuals below 13 and any viewers of that age must be guided by a parent or guardian. 18 is red, which meant that the film is only suitable for viewers aged 18 and above as it contains images of violence, horror and sex, as well as religious, political and social elements. All those changes are effective starting 1 April 2012.[13]

Top 10 highest-grossing Malaysia film of all time (as of September 2022)

All languages

Highest-grossing Malaysian films (all languages)
Rank Movie Year Studio Nett Gross (RM)[14]
1 Mat Kilau (film) July 2022 Studio Kembara 94 million
2 Hantu Kak Limah August 2018 Astro Shaw 36 million
3 BoBoiBoy Movie 2 August 2019 Animonsta Studios 29.60 million
4 PASKAL August 2018 Asia Tropical Film

Golden Screen Cinemas

Multimedia Entertainment

Granatum Ventures

Astro Shaw

28.98 million
5 Upin & Ipin: Keris Siamang Tunggal March 2019 Les Copaque Production 25.28 million
6 Polis EVO 2 November 2018 Skop Productions & Astro Shaw 20 million
7 Ola Bola January 2016 Astro Shaw 16.67 million
8 BoBoiBoy: The Movie March 2016 Animonsta Studios 15.77 million
9 KL Special Force March 2018 Viper Studio & Skop Productions 12.22 million
10 KL Gangster June 2011 Skop Productions 11.74 million
  • Vedigundu Pasangge earned £222 on the first day and lifetime collection of £291 in the United Kingdom.[15][16] It was the highest opening collection for a movie from Malaysia in the United Kingdom and overseas box office.

Mandarin language

Highest-grossing Malaysian films (Mandarin)
Rank Movie Year Studio Nett Gross (RM)[14]
1 The Journey January 2014 Astro Shaw 16.87 million
2 Ola Bola January 2016 Astro Shaw 16.67 million

Tamil language

Highest-grossing Malaysian films (Tamil)[17]
Rank Movie Year Studio Net gross (RM)
1 Vedigundu Pasangge 2018 Veedu Production 1,330,219
2 Maindhan 2014 Astro Shaw 903,550
3 Geethaiyin Raadhai 2016 Vikadakavi Production 592,162
4 Appalam 2011 Astro Shaw 590,707
5 Mayangaathey 2016 Touchtronics Entertainment 536,102
6 Vetti Pasanga 2014 Veedu Production 339,036
7 Neeyum Naanum 2018 BGW Studios 307,956
8 Vennira Iravuggal 2014 Shine Entertainment 260,353
9 Jagat 2015 Skyzen Studios 224,370
10 Vere Vazhi Ille 2015 Veedu Production 220,208

Further reading

  • Millet, Raphaël (2006) Singapore Cinema. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet ISBN 981-4155-42-X
  • McKay, Benjamin (13 October 2005). "A Conversation with Amir Muhammad" 24 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Criticine.
  • Ku Seman Ku Hussein. Mengimbas filem Melayu abad 20 // Massa, 218: 57; 4 Dis. 1999.
  • Van der Heide, William (2002) Malaysian Cinema, Asian Film: Border Crossing and National Cultures. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam Press. ISBN 90-5356-580-9

See also

References

  1. ^ a b . UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d "Industry Information - Finas".
  3. ^ . UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 24 December 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  4. ^ . UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 23 March 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  5. ^ a b . UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 3 November 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  6. ^ Baskett, Michael (2008). The Attractive Empire: Transnational Film Culture in Imperial Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3223-0.
  7. ^ Baskett. The Attractive Empire, pp. 99-100
  8. ^ Baskett. The Attractive Empire, pp. 94-97
  9. ^ Smith, Ian Hayden (2012). International Film Guide 2012. p. 257. ISBN 978-1-908215-01-7.
  10. ^ . 7 March 2012. Archived from the original on 21 April 2012. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
  11. ^ Frater, Patrick (9 September 2021). "Malaysia Cinemas Allowed to Reopen After a Year, But Remain Cautious". Variety. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  12. ^ "'Mat Kilau' is the No.1 Malaysian film of all-time, earning RM53mil in 13 days". The Star. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  13. ^ "New film classifications". 29 March 2012. Retrieved 25 April 2012.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ a b "Malaysian Box Office". Finas.
  15. ^ "Mission: Impossible – Fallout in cruise control at UK box office". 31 July 2018.
  16. ^ "Vedigundu Pasangge - Financial Information United Kingdom".
  17. ^ Finas. . Finas. Archived from the original on 2 January 2018.

External links

  • Criticine Malaysia 14 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine - Malaysia page of Southeast Asian Cinema journal
  • A-Z of Malaysian film posters 24 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine

cinema, malaysia, cinema, malaysia, consists, feature, films, produced, malaysia, shot, languages, malay, mandarin, cantonese, tamil, various, indigenous, languages, english, coliseum, theatre, kuala, lumpur, screens185, seats, 2017, screens, 2017, indoor, cin. The cinema of Malaysia consists of feature films produced in Malaysia shot in the languages Malay Mandarin Cantonese Tamil various indigenous languages and English Cinema of MalaysiaColiseum Theatre Kuala Lumpur No of screens185 997 seats 2017 1 094 screens 2017 151 indoor cinemas 2017 1 2 Per capita183 seats per screen 2013 3 5 screens per 100 000 inhabitants 2015 4 6 indoor cinemas per 1 000 000 inhabitants 2013 1 Main distributorsSkop ProductionsAstro ShawAnimonsta Studios 3 Produced feature films 2019 4 2 Total59Number of admissions 2017 5 2 Total72 840 000National films4 520 000 6 2 Gross box office 2017 5 2 TotalRM984 millionUS 246 millionNational filmsRM57 6 million 5 9 Malaysia produces about 60 feature films annually and between 300 400 television dramas and serials a year apart from the in house productions by the individual television stations The country also holds its own annual national level film awards known as the Malaysia Film Festival There are about 150 cinemas and cineplexes in Malaysia showing not only local films but also foreign films Foreign film producers are welcome to shoot on location in Malaysia undertake film co production ventures so that local artistes and technicians have the opportunity of gaining exposure and experience Currently here are some internationally famous Malaysian actors such as Michelle Yeoh and Henry Golding Contents 1 Early films 1933 41 2 Under Japanese colonial rule 1941 45 3 Development and decline 1945 75 4 Renaissance 1975 present 4 1 Category 18 films 4 2 Non Malay language cinema 5 New Films Classification 6 Top 10 highest grossing Malaysia film of all time as of September 2022 6 1 All languages 6 2 Mandarin language 6 3 Tamil language 7 Further reading 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEarly films 1933 41 EditMalaysian cinema began in 1933 with Leila Majnun based on a classical Persian story of two ill fated lovers Directed by B S Rajhans and produced by the Singapore based Motilal Chemical Company of Bombay the cast was derived from a local opera group Observing the success of this project two brothers Run Run and Run Me Shaw were prompted in 1937 to import some equipment from Shanghai and start the production of Malay films from their small studio at Ampas Road in Singapore However they only managed to produce five or six movies prior to the Japanese invasion in 1941 Under Japanese colonial rule 1941 45 EditIn 1941 when the Japanese occupied Malaya the first Japanese film companies found local film production to be extremely limited The exhibition market was dominated by overseas Chinese companies namely the Shaw Brothers The Japanese would later use Malaya for exactly the same purposes even obtaining the help of the Shaws to break into their extensive Southeast Asian film exhibition network 6 Although Malaya never became a major film production center under the Japanese it was a strategically important film market for Japan and a convenient outpost for moving films into and out of Southeast Asia The Japanese film studios shot a number of films in Shonan what the Japanese renamed Singapore during the occupation depicting the area in similar ways to the Japanese frontier Films such as Southern Winds II 続 南の風 1942 Shochiku Studios Tiger of Malay マライの虎 1942 Daiei Studios or Singapore All Out Attack シンガポール総攻撃 1943 Daiei Studios presented the area as an exotic land rich in resources occupied by simple but honest people 7 Japanese colonial films also associated the region with sex as many Karayuki san or prostitutes had been either sold to brothels or chosen to go to Southeast Asia to earn money around the turn of the century Karayuki san からゆきさん 1937 Toho Studios Kinoshita Keisuke s Flowering Port 花咲く港 1943 Shochiku Studios and later Imamura Shohei s Whoremonger 女衒 1987 Toei Studios which were all or at least partly shot on location are examples of the extent to which this subgenre dominates the representations of Malaya in Japanese cinema 8 Development and decline 1945 75 EditFollowing the end of World War II in 1945 the Shaw Brothers resumed production in 1947 with a Rajhans directed film called Singapura Di Waktu Malam Singapore by Night starring Siput Sarawak Backed by their chain of theatres which they either owned or rented the film enjoyed a good response The Shaw Brothers proceeded to produce more films and introduced new faces including the Sumatran born Kasma Booty Her first film Cempaka revolved around the life of a native island girl In 1948 P Ramlee who later became one of the foremost figures in Malay cinema made his debut in the film Cinta Love Ramlee s talents in music composing and singing brought him prominence He was very versatile as a leading actor a comic dramatic artiste scriptwriter and film director Most of his early films carried plenty of singing and dancing scenes a trend introduced by Indian film directors After Rajhans Shaw Brothers imported many other Indian film directors among them S Ramanathan K R Seetharama Sastry Phani Majumdar and D Ghoss There were also some local film directors such as L Krishnan and K M Bashker who learned the trade and techniques through experience and apprenticeship By the 1960s many of the expatriates were replaced by local directors The success enjoyed by the Shaw Brother s film studio known as the Malay Film Productions MFP encouraged a few other entrepreneurs to venture into the same business as was the case with the Nusantara film company started in 1951 by Hsu Chiu Meng However he depended heavily on independent theatres and after producing about a dozen films Nusantara closed down in 1954 In 1952 Ho Ah Loke opened a studio on Tampines Road Singapore calling his company Rimau Film Productions later to be known as Keris Film Productions Ho owned a few small theatres through his earlier venture as a film distributor He managed to produce a number of films and in 1956 merged with Cathay Organisation owned by millionaire Loke Wan Tho The company was renamed Cathy Keris Film Productions with its studio on East Coast Road Singapore Supported by their own theatre chain throughout Malaya and Singapore Cathay Keris films posed a challenge to the films produced by Shaw s MFP studios Shaw studios produced about ten films a year while Cathay Keris too produced about the same number During those early years all the films were in black and white The studios had their own laboratories recording and editing facilities Direct sound recording was the practice from the beginning until the advent of the 1960s Then post synching or dubbing systems appeared and are still in use today Screenplays were mostly based on folk tales stage plays and legends of fictional or real historical heroes or events MFP made Hang Tuah in 1956 about the legendary Melaka warrior Hang Tuah who lived during the heyday of the Melaka Sultanate It was done in Eastman Color and directed by Indian Phani Majumdar who was specially brought in to ensure that the film made it to the East Asia Film Festival P Ramlee acted as Hang Tuah and also composed the background music for which the film won an award In response Cathay Keris produced Hang Jebat about Hang Tuah s closest friend who becomes involved in a life or death struggle with him Just before they ceased operations both MFP and Cathay Keris produced three colour films each Shaw Brothers produced Ribut Storm Hang Tuah and Raja Bersiong The Fanged King The latter a legend from the state of Kedah was written by Malaysia s first Prime Minister the late Tunku Abdul Rahman Cathay Keris produced Buluh Perindu The Magic Flute Cinta Gadis Rimba The Virgin Of Borneo and Mahsuri The Maid of Langkawi another Kedah legend written by Tunku Abdul Rahman Although many companies emerged such as Nusantara Films Tan amp Wong Film Company Rimau Productions and Cathay Keris many closed down due to escalating production costs and diminishing audiences leaving only MFP and Cathay Keris both operating in Singapore In 1961 H M Shah bought over a piece of prime land on the fringe of Kuala Lumpur and turned it into Merdeka Studio It had a meager beginning but once the top stars started their exodus from the two Singapore studios its growth surged dramatically Located adjacent to the National Zoo on Hulu Kelang Road it is 13 kilometres from the city Today it is the headquarters of the National Film Development Corporation Malaysia FINAS The Shaw Brothers dispatched some of their Singapore film directors among them L Krishnan P Ramlee Salleh Ghani Jamil Sulong Omer Rojik S Kadarisman Sudarmaji Naz Achnas M Amin and Jins Shamsuddin to make films at Merdeka Renaissance 1975 present EditIn 1975 a renaissance prompted a revitalised growth when Sabah Films grossed huge profits with its maiden offering Keluarga Comat Comat s Family Soon other companies mushroomed such as Perfima Syed Kechik Indra Jins Shamsuddin and others The 1980s saw numerous changes A vital one was the setting up FINAS in 1981 to develop and stimulate the growth and maintain the standards of the film industry by various means including the provision of research and advisory services FINAS has since set up numerous facilities to promote the industry including a credit facility scheme which enables young film makers to test their potential The revival in the industry also made changes to certain formats of the local film productions Nearly all the films were made in colour some using the scope format and some the standard format There were no fixed salaries for artists attached to a certain company or studio A company can only do two of three functions production distribution or exhibition to avoid a monopoly by a certain party The producers also might be able to recover part of their investment by the return of the entertainment tax as a way of incentive A further incentive to local film makers is that they are invited to make television programmes either in film format or video format As a result there are now more than 300 film companies registered with FINAS In 1989 and 1990 over 20 feature films were produced a number that decreased to 15 in 1995 but still more than the five feature films made in 1985 In the mid 2000s Malaysian film industry saw an increase in number of domestic film production from only seven films in 1999 to 26 films in 2009 The increase of domestic film production is because of new opening of cinemas and limitations on the screening of foreign films in local cinemas Currently the Malaysian film industry faces competition from surrounding regional cinemas such as those from Indonesia Thailand the Philippines and India In 2007 Tan Chui Mui s Love Conquers All won a Tiger Award at the 36th International Film Festival Rotterdam In 2008 Liew Seng Tat s Flower in the Pocket also won a Tiger Award at the 37th International Film Festival Rotterdam In 2011 over 40 films were released in Malaysia 9 In 2012 FINAS cooperated with Skim Wajib Tayang to allow 2 local films to be screened at local cinemas every week effective on 24 May to solve the delay of screening faced by local film industry 10 As such in 2012 70 films queued up to be shown in Malaysia nationwide During the global pandemic cinemas were closed for up to a year beginning around March 2020 till late September 2021 11 In the July 2022 the resurgence of cinema attendance was evidence by the high attendance for Mat Kilau Kebangkitan Pahlawan Mat Kilau The Rise of a Warrior directed by Syamsul Yusof in which he was reported to claim earned RM53mil in 13 days thus earning the historical epic as the highest grossing Malaysian film of all time 12 Category 18 films Edit At the beginning of Malaysian film industry while watching movies there were no age restrictions and films were done under strict guidelines For instance no sex scenes and crimes were permitted Malaysian film classification was introduced in 1996 to provide parents of minors a chance to prevent their children from being exposed to inappropriate materials There are four 18 categories used in Malaysia unlike other countries which only used one classification for each age These are 18PA 18PL 18SG and 18SX however 18PA is rarely used Movies prior to 1996 also carry ratings and some of the local movies prior to 1996 later carry 18 ratings for example Mekanik 1983 later rated 18SX and Pelumba Malam 1989 later rated 18PL Two of the earlier local movies with 18 ratings since its introduction Litar Kasih 1996 and Panas 1998 were both classified 18SX However these movies still enjoyed surprising box office successes in Malaysia Non Malay language cinema Edit Main article Malaysian Tamil cinema Malaysian films are also produced in Tamil language and Mandarin Examples include Malaysia s most successful action thriller film franchise Heads Up Fighters A Malaysian Tamil film titled Jagat won the best Malaysian film in year 2016 New Films Classification EditOn 29 March 2012 the Film Censorship Board of Malaysia released new colour coded logo designs for cinema films classification U or Umum is now blue which meant that the film can be watched by all ages and consists of what the Board deems positive depictions of values P13 or Penjaga 13 is yellow which signifies that caution should be taken when watching the film as it is not suitable for individuals below 13 and any viewers of that age must be guided by a parent or guardian 18 is red which meant that the film is only suitable for viewers aged 18 and above as it contains images of violence horror and sex as well as religious political and social elements All those changes are effective starting 1 April 2012 13 Top 10 highest grossing Malaysia film of all time as of September 2022 EditAll languages Edit Highest grossing Malaysian films all languages Rank Movie Year Studio Nett Gross RM 14 1 Mat Kilau film July 2022 Studio Kembara 94 million2 Hantu Kak Limah August 2018 Astro Shaw 36 million3 BoBoiBoy Movie 2 August 2019 Animonsta Studios 29 60 million4 PASKAL August 2018 Asia Tropical Film Golden Screen CinemasMultimedia EntertainmentGranatum VenturesAstro Shaw 28 98 million5 Upin amp Ipin Keris Siamang Tunggal March 2019 Les Copaque Production 25 28 million6 Polis EVO 2 November 2018 Skop Productions amp Astro Shaw 20 million7 Ola Bola January 2016 Astro Shaw 16 67 million8 BoBoiBoy The Movie March 2016 Animonsta Studios 15 77 million9 KL Special Force March 2018 Viper Studio amp Skop Productions 12 22 million10 KL Gangster June 2011 Skop Productions 11 74 millionVedigundu Pasangge earned 222 on the first day and lifetime collection of 291 in the United Kingdom 15 16 It was the highest opening collection for a movie from Malaysia in the United Kingdom and overseas box office Mandarin language Edit Highest grossing Malaysian films Mandarin Rank Movie Year Studio Nett Gross RM 14 1 The Journey January 2014 Astro Shaw 16 87 million2 Ola Bola January 2016 Astro Shaw 16 67 millionTamil language Edit Highest grossing Malaysian films Tamil 17 Rank Movie Year Studio Net gross RM 1 Vedigundu Pasangge 2018 Veedu Production 1 330 2192 Maindhan 2014 Astro Shaw 903 5503 Geethaiyin Raadhai 2016 Vikadakavi Production 592 1624 Appalam 2011 Astro Shaw 590 7075 Mayangaathey 2016 Touchtronics Entertainment 536 1026 Vetti Pasanga 2014 Veedu Production 339 0367 Neeyum Naanum 2018 BGW Studios 307 9568 Vennira Iravuggal 2014 Shine Entertainment 260 3539 Jagat 2015 Skyzen Studios 224 37010 Vere Vazhi Ille 2015 Veedu Production 220 208Further reading EditMillet Raphael 2006 Singapore Cinema Singapore Editions Didier Millet ISBN 981 4155 42 X McKay Benjamin 13 October 2005 A Conversation with Amir Muhammad Archived 24 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Criticine Ku Seman Ku Hussein Mengimbas filem Melayu abad 20 Massa 218 57 4 Dis 1999 Van der Heide William 2002 Malaysian Cinema Asian Film Border Crossing and National Cultures Amsterdam University of Amsterdam Press ISBN 90 5356 580 9See also EditMalaysian Tamil Cinema Tamil language movie from Malaysia Cinema of the world World cinema Asian cinema Southeast Asian cinema East Asian cinema List of cinemas in MalaysiaReferences Edit a b Table 8 Cinema Infrastructure Capacity UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Retrieved 5 November 2013 a b c d Industry Information Finas Table 6 Share of Top 3 distributors Excel UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on 24 December 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Table 1 Feature Film Production Genre Method of Shooting UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on 23 March 2014 Retrieved 5 November 2013 a b Table 11 Exhibition Admissions amp Gross Box Office GBO UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Baskett Michael 2008 The Attractive Empire Transnational Film Culture in Imperial Japan Honolulu University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3223 0 Baskett The Attractive Empire pp 99 100 Baskett The Attractive Empire pp 94 97 Smith Ian Hayden 2012 International Film Guide 2012 p 257 ISBN 978 1 908215 01 7 2 local films per week 7 March 2012 Archived from the original on 21 April 2012 Retrieved 25 April 2012 Frater Patrick 9 September 2021 Malaysia Cinemas Allowed to Reopen After a Year But Remain Cautious Variety Retrieved 20 July 2022 Mat Kilau is the No 1 Malaysian film of all time earning RM53mil in 13 days The Star Retrieved 20 July 2022 New film classifications 29 March 2012 Retrieved 25 April 2012 permanent dead link a b Malaysian Box Office Finas Mission Impossible Fallout in cruise control at UK box office 31 July 2018 Vedigundu Pasangge Financial Information United Kingdom Finas Finas Box Office Finas Archived from the original on 2 January 2018 External links EditCriticine Malaysia Archived 14 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Malaysia page of Southeast Asian Cinema journal A Z of Malaysian film posters Archived 24 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cinema of Malaysia amp oldid 1122825198, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.