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Kampung Boy (TV series)

Kampung Boy is a Malaysian animated television series broadcast from 14 September 1999, to 12 September 2000. It is about the adventures of a young boy, Mat, and his life in a kampung (village). The series is adapted from the best-selling graphical novel The Kampung Boy, an autobiography of local cartoonist Lat. Twenty-six episodes – one of which won an Annecy Award – were first shown on Malaysian satellite television network Astro before being distributed to sixty other countries.

Kampung Boy
Title card
GenreComedy drama
Created byLat
Theme music composerDave Andrew, Farid Ali
Country of originMalaysia
Original languagesMalay (Malaysian release)
English (International release)
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes26
Production
Production locationsNorth America, Philippines
Running time26 minutes
Production companiesLacewood Studio
Matinee Entertainment
Measat Broadcast Network Systems
DistributorItel
Release
Original networkAstro Ria
Astro Ceria
Picture formatPAL
Original release14 September 1999 (1999-09-14) –
12 September 2000 (2000-09-12)

A main theme of Kampung Boy is the contrast between the traditional rural way of life and the modern urban lifestyle. The series promotes the village lifestyle as an environment that is fun and conducive to the development of a healthy and intelligent child. It raises the issue of modernization, proposing that new values and technologies should be carefully examined by a society before being accepted.

Lat's animation has won praises for its technical work and refreshing content, although questions have been raised by Southeast Asian audiences over its similarities with Western animation and its deviations from the local style of spoken English. Malaysian animation critics held up Kampung Boy as the standard to which their country's animators should aspire, and academics in cultural studies regarded the series as a method of using modern technologies and cultural practices to preserve Malaysian history.

Origins

In 1979, the autobiographical graphic novel The Kampung Boy was published. The story of a young Malay boy's childhood in a kampung (village) proved to be a commercial and critical success, establishing its author Lat as the "most renowned cartoonist in Malaysia".[1] The Kampung Boy's success prompted Lat to consider using other media to reach out to the masses.[1]

The seeds for the animated adaptation of The Kampung Boy were sown in 1993 in a conversation between Lat and Ananda Krishnan, founder of Astro.[2] Western and Japanese cartoons flooded the local television channels during the 1990s,[3] and Lat decried those productions for violence and jokes that he considered unsuitable for Malaysia and its youths.[4][5] Recognising that the younger generation preferred colourful animations over static black and white drawings,[6] Lat was keen for a local animated series to promote local values among Malaysian children.[4] After Krishnan's company offered Lat financial support to start an animation project,[7][8] the cartoonist began plans to adapt his trademark comic to the television screen.[4]

Production

 
A frame from a Kampung Boy storyboard (from left to right): Ana, Mat, and Bo

Lat imagined several stories he wished to see in animated form, and then looked abroad for help producing them. Lacewood Studio in Ottawa, Canada, was in charge of animating the pilot episode. World Sports and Entertainment of Los Angeles was involved as well; Norman Singer organised the production and Gerald Tripp helped Lat to write the script. Bobdog Production was responsible for animating another five episodes.[9] However, Krishnan and Lat were disappointed with the results, which had taken two years of work to produce.[8] They thought the pilot was "slow-moving". Lat believed Lacewood had accommodated him too often during the production, accepting his input without question. They failed to inform him that although a slow pace worked for static cartoon drawings, a good animation was often "lively, fast-moving, full of action and fantasy".[10][9][11]

In 1995 Lat and Krishnan engaged Matinee Entertainment to complete the project, and Lat started to fly back and forth between Kuala Lumpur and Los Angeles to work closely with Matinee's employees. His experience with Matinee's team of writers and animators was positive; they were more proactive than Lacewood's, brainstorming his ideas and turning them into viable scripts and storyboards.[9] Director Frank Saperstein performed the final edit, polishing up the scripts.[8] Lat, however, had the final say with regards to cultural depictions, overriding several suggestions such as characters kissing in front of others and the use of Western street slang, as these were unpalatable to the Malaysian public. He also enforced accuracy in the depictions of objects such as bullock carts, noting that the American artists thought Malaysian carts were identical to their Mexican counterparts.[9]

The storyboards were translated into animations by the Philippine Animation Studio in Manila. Lat again took several trips, this time to the Philippines, to advise the animators and ensure that everything was depicted accurately.[12] Once the animation had been completed, the prints were sent to Vietnam for processing. Finally, the films were delivered to Krishnan's studio in Kuala Lumpur for voice recording in English and Bahasa Malaysia.[10] Like Lat, Saperstein flew back and forth among the involved countries to coordinate efforts and make sure production standards never dropped.[13] Saperstein's efforts for his first twelve episodes were enough to convince Lat to continue working with Matinee for the project.[8]

The entire project took four years to complete;[8] each episode cost approximately 350,000 United States dollars (about one million Malaysian ringgit), partly funded by Measat,[11] and took four to five months to produce.[14] The pilot was shown over TV1 on 10 February 1997, and the series began its broadcast over Astro Ria two-and-a-half years later.[15] Kinder Channel (Germany) and Teletoon (Canada) broadcast the series after buying the rights through London-based distributor Itel,[11] and the series has been broadcast in more than sixty countries since its first airing in Malaysia.[16] Measat expected to recover their investment in about ten years.[11] Although Kampung Boy originated in Malaysia, most of its production took place abroad.[17] It was local in concept, but could be construed as a foreign production in terms of animation. This led to laments that had Malaysian studios been hired to participate in animation work, the country's industry would have benefited by learning from foreign animation expertise and methodology.[18]

Characters

The protagonist of the series is a nine-year-old boy named Mat, who typically wears a sarong pelikat and a white singlet. Sporting a broad nose, small eyes, and untidy black hair, the short and rounded boy resembles his creator, Lat, as a child.[19] Mat has a younger sister, Ana, and they live in a house with their father and mother, Yap and Yah, respectively. Their nuclear family structure is predominant in the village. Yap's mother, Opah, does not live with them but is often seen in their house.[20] Also frequently appearing are Mat's buddies, Bo and Tak, whose names are components of the Malay word botak (bald).[21] The two are styled after comic characters of traditional wayang kulit (shadow play);[19] Bo is the more intelligent of the pair, while Tak has a tendency to be a show-off.[11] Other supporting characters include Normah (a girl formerly from the city) and Mrs. Hew (Mat's teacher).[22]

The Malay and English voices of the characters were dubbed by Malaysian voice actors. Child actors were employed for the younger roles;[10] however, Mat, Ana, Bo, and Tak were voiced by actors who were in their early twenties.[23][24] Certain actors had the task of voicing multiple roles; for example, the voice director was responsible for speaking the roles of Yah and Mrs. Hew. Initially, voice talents were hired in Los Angeles to dub the English version, but they "kept slipping into a Jamaican accent".[10] Although this soundtrack was not used in the series, the producers felt it was too humorous to waste and included it in The Making of Kampung Boy,[10] which was broadcast a week before the start of the series.[25]

Setting

Whereas Kampung Boy the comic book was based on life in the 1950s, its animation spin-off was set in the 1990s.[14] Although the scenery and details are exaggerated, the animation is accurate in its depiction of the Malaysian village and the life of its inhabitants.[26] Dr. Rohani Hashim, of Universiti Sains Malaysia's School of Communication, called the series a "detailed recreation of a rural Malay childhood".[27] The layout of Mat's village and the style of its houses are patterned after those in the rural areas of Perak where clusters of houses line a river which provides water for the villagers' needs. The children play in the surrounding jungle, while the adults toil in the fields and commute to the city to work.[28]

Saperstein directed the use of warm and soft colours in the series; this colour scheme was modelled after that of Winnie the Pooh,[10] bestowing a "soft, cuddly feel", according to Far Eastern Economic Review journalist S. Jayasankaran, to the animation.[8] Much of the show's visuals followed Lat's art style. Outlines are drawn in a bold manner, making objects stand out from the background – an effect particularly aided by the rich use of brown, green, and yellow as the dominant colours. The last two colours are heavily used in the depictions of nature, contrasting well with each other and separating the background from the middle ground. Aside from being the main colour for the houses, brown is used as the skin tone of the characters. Drawn with "short and round shapes", Mat and his fellow Malays are highlighted with bright colours.[19]

Themes and hallmarks

Kampung Boy's episodes follow a structure reminiscent of Hollywood cartoons. Each episode contains two separate stories whose themes interweave each other as the show switches between scenes of the two stories. By the end of the episode, the two threads are resolved by a common idea. Generally, one story focuses on the kampung children, and the other on the adults.[29] The creators of Kampung Boy refrained from copying ideas commonly found in Western and Japanese cartoons. Other Malaysian animations produced since the 1990s have not been as meticulously faithful to portraying images and themes familiar to the locals. For example, Sang Wira's (1996) protagonist bears a striking resemblance to Doraemon, and the bear and bee in Ngat dan Taboh (2002) play out antics similar to those of Tom and Jerry. Lat's close involvement with the project kept its portrayals faithful to Malaysian culture.[17] Kampung life in the animation features "true-blue Malaysian elements" such as supernatural superstitions (pontianaks or female vampires), monkeys trained to pluck coconuts, and traditions that are forgotten in the transition from rural to urban living.[10][30]

The cartoon series explores ideas through the activities of the characters, especially their interactions with one another.[21] Rohani classified the genre of the show as comedy drama.[1] According to her, the main theme in Kampung Boy is nostalgia, carrying Lat's intention to portray rural childhood as a "much more interesting and creative" experience than growing up in an urban environment.[26] Several episodes champion the kampung way of life. In "Antara Jaguh & Rakan" ("Between Champions or Friends") Mat and his friends defeat a city soccer team because of their toughness bred from doing hard work in the village. "SiMat Manusia Pintar" ("Smart Like a Flying Fox") suggests that the unpolluted environment of the kampung promotes the upbringing of a healthier and more intelligent child. Normah arrives from the city in "Mat Main Wayang" ("The Shadow Knows"), and although she disdains the kampung initially, she is won over by the villagers' tenderness toward her.[31]

The intrusion of modern technology and attitudes into this idyllic kampung way of life is also a main topic in the series.[21] Several episodes introduce electrical appliances and ideas associated with urban lifestyles to the villagers.[8][10] For example, the convenience of motor cars versus the traditional use of bullock carts is debated by the characters in "Naik Keretaku" ("Dad's Driving Test"). Despite the show's support of the kampung lifestyle, it portrays aspects of modern living in a positive light as well. Opah, an old woman, is depicted as a capable modern woman, proficient in driving a van and fixing televisions.[32] The city is characterized as a gateway to a range of cultures and ideas that are not found in a Malaysian rural village, as illustrated in the encounter and formation of a friendship between Mat and a Chinese boy in "Naik Keretaku".[33]

The series also explores changes in Malaysian rural society that had taken place during the 1950s to 1990s. For example, through flashbacks, "Yah, Kahwinkan Kami!" ("Well, Marry Us!") displays traditional marriage customs that are no longer practiced by urban dwellers. Family ties are shown to be strong in the rural community – family members show close attention and concern to one another. Conversely, those who immersed themselves in city life are depicted to have lost their communal bonds. Although Mat's family is depicted to follow the rules of the Malay patriarchal society, modern values are in its portrayal. Yap does not leave the responsibilities of child-rearing all to Yah; he takes care of Ana while she watches over Mat. Although the series presents the female characters as housewives, it makes the point in "Nasib Si Gadis Desa" ("It's a Girl's Life") that the traditional family role of the Malay woman is as equal and valuable as the man's. The episode also mentions the achievements of women in careers such as space exploration and science.[34]

Overall, Rohani said Lat's cartoon series was subtly recording a story of "rapidly vanishing Malay tradition and innocence", while advising viewers to consider the societal changes around them.[27] According to her, the cartoonist's concern was to inspire the audience to consider the pace of urbanisation and to realise that the adoption or rejection of new values is a common decision by them.[35] The show, in her opinion, suggests that changes should be carefully examined and adopted only if beneficial to the society. Furthermore, the adoption of new ideas and culture should be a gradual process, and the changes tailored accordingly to the society.[36]

Reception, legacy, and achievements

Kampung Boy was submitted to the 1999 Annecy International Animated Film Festival in France. One of its episodes, "Oh, Tok!", won the Best Animation for a television series of 13 minutes and more.[37] The episode was about a spooky banyan tree that became the object of Mat's fear.[8] Because of the local contents in the animation and the nostalgic appeal of the kampung lifestyle, Malaysian comics scholar Muliyadi Mahamood expected success for Kampung Boy in his country.[21]

The 26-episode series was popular with the young and received positive reviews for technical details and content.[38][39] It has also attracted criticism for similarities to United States cartoon series The Simpsons; audiences noticed that Mat's Malaysian family was similar in several ways to Bart Simpson's dysfunctional American family. Similarly, some critics pointed out that the English spoken in Kampung Boy is substantially different from Malaysian English, which is heavily influenced by British English;[19] reporter Daryl Goh perceived an American accent to the English-language voices.[11] Lat explained that the producers had to tone down the use of "traditional Malay customs, locales and language" to market the series to a wider global audience. Rohani found the decision "regrettable"; it made the animation less than an authentic Malay product.[19]

The animation was regarded by Dr. Paulette Dellios, of Bond University's School of Humanities and Social Sciences, as a cultural artefact: a reminder and preservation of a country's old way of life, created and produced by an international team, and displayed via modern technologies to the world.[40] According to Rohani, Kampung Boy was a record of Malay traditions and transitions experienced by the rural community during the 1950s to 1990s.[36] Among the several Malaysian animations that used local settings, Lat's series was in veteran film director Hassan Abdul Muthalib's view the best in portraying the country's culture and traditions; Hassan also said that the success in marketing the series overseas made Kampung Boy the benchmark for Malaysia's animation industry.[18]

References

  1. ^ a b c Rohani 2005, p. 390.
  2. ^ Lat 2001, pp. 153–154.
  3. ^ Lent 2008, p. 32.
  4. ^ a b c Muliyadi 2001, p. 146.
  5. ^ Unhealthy Elements 2004.
  6. ^ Crossings: Datuk Lat 2003, 39:35–40:07, 41:09–41:41.
  7. ^ Campbell 2007.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Jayasankaran 1999, p. 36.
  9. ^ a b c d Lat 2001, p. 154.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Manavalan 1999.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Goh 1999.
  12. ^ Hassan 2007, p. 296.
  13. ^ DeMott 2004.
  14. ^ a b Lat Cartoon Series 1996.
  15. ^ Muliyadi 2001, p. 145.
  16. ^ Seneviratne 2002.
  17. ^ a b Hassan 2007, p. 292.
  18. ^ a b Hassan 2007, p. 293.
  19. ^ a b c d e Rohani 2005, p. 391.
  20. ^ Rohani 2005, p. 397.
  21. ^ a b c d Muliyadi 2001, p. 147.
  22. ^ Rohani 2005, pp. 391–392.
  23. ^ Haliza 2000.
  24. ^ Chandran 2005.
  25. ^ Haliza 1999a.
  26. ^ a b Rohani 2005, p. 392.
  27. ^ a b Rohani 2005, p. 389.
  28. ^ Rohani 2005, pp. 392–394, 396, 398.
  29. ^ Hassan 2007, pp. 292–293.
  30. ^ Rohani 2005, p. 396.
  31. ^ Rohani 2005, pp. 394–395.
  32. ^ Rohani 2005, pp. 393–394.
  33. ^ Rohani 2005, p. 394.
  34. ^ Rohani 2005, pp. 396–397.
  35. ^ Rohani 2005, p. 395.
  36. ^ a b Rohani 2005, p. 398.
  37. ^ Haliza 1999b.
  38. ^ Muliyadi 2001, pp. 147–148.
  39. ^ More than a Cartoonist 2007, p. 257.
  40. ^ Dellios 2000, p. 1.

Bibliography

Interviews/self-introspectives

  • Campbell, Eddie; Lat (subject) (15 January 2007). . First Hand Books – Doodles and Dailies. New York, United States: First Second Books. Archived from the original on 23 June 2008. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
  • Lat (2001). "Vignette: Notes of a Cartoonist Temporarily Turned Animator". In Lent, John (ed.). Animation in Asia and the Pacific. Indiana, United States: Indiana University Press. pp. 153–154. ISBN 0-253-34035-7.

Academic sources

  • Dellios, Paulette (2000). "Museums in the Global Kampung: Mixed Messages". Culture Mandala: The Bulletin of the Centre for East-West Cultural and Economic Studies. Queensland, Australia: Bond University. 4 (1): 1–8. ISSN 1322-6916. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  • Lent, John (2008). "Asian Animation and Its Search for National Identity and Global Markets 1". ASIFA Magazine: The International Animation Journal. Vol. 21, no. 1. Hertfordshire, United Kingdom: John Libbey Publishing. pp. 31–41.
  • Muliyadi Mahamood (2001). "The History of Malaysian Animated Cartoons". In Lent, John (ed.). Animation in Asia and the Pacific. Indiana, United States: Indiana University Press. pp. 131–152. ISBN 0-253-34035-7.
  • Rohani Hashim (2005). "Lat's Kampong Boy: Rural Malays in Tradition and Transition". In Palmer, Edwina (ed.). Asian Futures, Asian Traditions. Kent, United Kingdom: Global Oriental. pp. 389–400. ISBN 1-901903-16-8.
  • Hassan Abdullah Muthalib (June 2007). "From Mousedeer to Mouse: Malaysian Animation at the Crossroads". Inter-Asia Cultural Studies: Southeast Asian Cinema. Hong Kong: Dow Jones & Company. 8 (2): 288–297. doi:10.1080/14649370701238755. ISSN 1464-9373. S2CID 54991062. IDNumber: 512199.

Journalistic sources

  • Chandran, Sheela (10 July 2005). . The Star. Selangor, Malaysia: Star Publications. Archived from the original on 19 August 2010. Retrieved 19 August 2010.
  • Crossings: Datuk Lat (Television production). Singapore: Discovery Networks Asia. 21 September 2003.
  • DeMott, Rick (9 November 2004). . AWN.com. Los Angeles, United States: Animation World Network. Archived from the original on 18 August 2010. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  • Goh, Daryl (27 August 1999). . The Star. Selangor, Malaysia: Star Publications. Archived from the original on 13 February 2005. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  • Haliza Ahmad (19 August 1999a). "'Kampung Boy' Arrives". The Malay Mail. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: New Straits Times Press. p. 11. ProQuest 326156898.
  • Haliza Ahmad (24 December 1999b). "Annecy Awards '99 for Lat's Kampung Boy". The Malay Mail. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: New Straits Times Press. p. 15. ProQuest 326120280.
  • Haliza Ahmad (24 July 2000). "Voices Behind Kampung Boy Characters". The Malay Mail. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: New Straits Times Press. p. 23. ProQuest 326158346.
  • Jayasankaran, S (22 July 1999). "Going Global". Far Eastern Economic Review. Hong Kong: Dow Jones & Company. 162 (29): 35–36. ISSN 0014-7591. ProQuest 208233691.
  • Manavalan, Theresa (4 July 1999). "Kampung Boy Hits Big Time". New Sunday Times. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: New Straits Times Press. p. 10. ProQuest 266437109.
  • "Lat Cartoon Series to Debut on Astro TV". New Straits Times. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: New Straits Times Press. 26 November 1996. p. 9. ProQuest 269096934.
  • . Annual Business Economic and Political Review: Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Oxford Business Group. 2 (Emerging Malaysia 2007): 257–258. January 2007. ISSN 1755-232X. Archived from the original on 15 July 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  • Seneviratne, Kalinga (12 December 2002). "Asia's Animation Industry Spreads Its Wings". Asia Times Online. Hong Kong. Inter Press Service. Archived from the original on 17 November 2004. Retrieved 19 August 2010.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • "'Unhealthy' Elements Invading Local Cartoon Industry, Says Lat". Financial Times. Kuala Lumpur: Financial Times Group. Bernama. 7 February 2004. p. 1. ProQuest 447834102.

External links

kampung, series, kampung, malaysian, animated, television, series, broadcast, from, september, 1999, september, 2000, about, adventures, young, life, kampung, village, series, adapted, from, best, selling, graphical, novel, kampung, autobiography, local, carto. Kampung Boy is a Malaysian animated television series broadcast from 14 September 1999 to 12 September 2000 It is about the adventures of a young boy Mat and his life in a kampung village The series is adapted from the best selling graphical novel The Kampung Boy an autobiography of local cartoonist Lat Twenty six episodes one of which won an Annecy Award were first shown on Malaysian satellite television network Astro before being distributed to sixty other countries Kampung BoyTitle cardGenreComedy dramaCreated byLatTheme music composerDave Andrew Farid AliCountry of originMalaysiaOriginal languagesMalay Malaysian release English International release No of seasons2No of episodes26ProductionProduction locationsNorth America PhilippinesRunning time26 minutesProduction companiesLacewood StudioMatinee EntertainmentMeasat Broadcast Network SystemsDistributorItelReleaseOriginal networkAstro RiaAstro CeriaPicture formatPALOriginal release14 September 1999 1999 09 14 12 September 2000 2000 09 12 A main theme of Kampung Boy is the contrast between the traditional rural way of life and the modern urban lifestyle The series promotes the village lifestyle as an environment that is fun and conducive to the development of a healthy and intelligent child It raises the issue of modernization proposing that new values and technologies should be carefully examined by a society before being accepted Lat s animation has won praises for its technical work and refreshing content although questions have been raised by Southeast Asian audiences over its similarities with Western animation and its deviations from the local style of spoken English Malaysian animation critics held up Kampung Boy as the standard to which their country s animators should aspire and academics in cultural studies regarded the series as a method of using modern technologies and cultural practices to preserve Malaysian history Contents 1 Origins 2 Production 3 Characters 4 Setting 5 Themes and hallmarks 6 Reception legacy and achievements 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksOriginsIn 1979 the autobiographical graphic novel The Kampung Boy was published The story of a young Malay boy s childhood in a kampung village proved to be a commercial and critical success establishing its author Lat as the most renowned cartoonist in Malaysia 1 The Kampung Boy s success prompted Lat to consider using other media to reach out to the masses 1 The seeds for the animated adaptation of The Kampung Boy were sown in 1993 in a conversation between Lat and Ananda Krishnan founder of Astro 2 Western and Japanese cartoons flooded the local television channels during the 1990s 3 and Lat decried those productions for violence and jokes that he considered unsuitable for Malaysia and its youths 4 5 Recognising that the younger generation preferred colourful animations over static black and white drawings 6 Lat was keen for a local animated series to promote local values among Malaysian children 4 After Krishnan s company offered Lat financial support to start an animation project 7 8 the cartoonist began plans to adapt his trademark comic to the television screen 4 Production A frame from a Kampung Boy storyboard from left to right Ana Mat and Bo Lat imagined several stories he wished to see in animated form and then looked abroad for help producing them Lacewood Studio in Ottawa Canada was in charge of animating the pilot episode World Sports and Entertainment of Los Angeles was involved as well Norman Singer organised the production and Gerald Tripp helped Lat to write the script Bobdog Production was responsible for animating another five episodes 9 However Krishnan and Lat were disappointed with the results which had taken two years of work to produce 8 They thought the pilot was slow moving Lat believed Lacewood had accommodated him too often during the production accepting his input without question They failed to inform him that although a slow pace worked for static cartoon drawings a good animation was often lively fast moving full of action and fantasy 10 9 11 In 1995 Lat and Krishnan engaged Matinee Entertainment to complete the project and Lat started to fly back and forth between Kuala Lumpur and Los Angeles to work closely with Matinee s employees His experience with Matinee s team of writers and animators was positive they were more proactive than Lacewood s brainstorming his ideas and turning them into viable scripts and storyboards 9 Director Frank Saperstein performed the final edit polishing up the scripts 8 Lat however had the final say with regards to cultural depictions overriding several suggestions such as characters kissing in front of others and the use of Western street slang as these were unpalatable to the Malaysian public He also enforced accuracy in the depictions of objects such as bullock carts noting that the American artists thought Malaysian carts were identical to their Mexican counterparts 9 The storyboards were translated into animations by the Philippine Animation Studio in Manila Lat again took several trips this time to the Philippines to advise the animators and ensure that everything was depicted accurately 12 Once the animation had been completed the prints were sent to Vietnam for processing Finally the films were delivered to Krishnan s studio in Kuala Lumpur for voice recording in English and Bahasa Malaysia 10 Like Lat Saperstein flew back and forth among the involved countries to coordinate efforts and make sure production standards never dropped 13 Saperstein s efforts for his first twelve episodes were enough to convince Lat to continue working with Matinee for the project 8 The entire project took four years to complete 8 each episode cost approximately 350 000 United States dollars about one million Malaysian ringgit partly funded by Measat 11 and took four to five months to produce 14 The pilot was shown over TV1 on 10 February 1997 and the series began its broadcast over Astro Ria two and a half years later 15 Kinder Channel Germany and Teletoon Canada broadcast the series after buying the rights through London based distributor Itel 11 and the series has been broadcast in more than sixty countries since its first airing in Malaysia 16 Measat expected to recover their investment in about ten years 11 Although Kampung Boy originated in Malaysia most of its production took place abroad 17 It was local in concept but could be construed as a foreign production in terms of animation This led to laments that had Malaysian studios been hired to participate in animation work the country s industry would have benefited by learning from foreign animation expertise and methodology 18 CharactersThe protagonist of the series is a nine year old boy named Mat who typically wears a sarong pelikat and a white singlet Sporting a broad nose small eyes and untidy black hair the short and rounded boy resembles his creator Lat as a child 19 Mat has a younger sister Ana and they live in a house with their father and mother Yap and Yah respectively Their nuclear family structure is predominant in the village Yap s mother Opah does not live with them but is often seen in their house 20 Also frequently appearing are Mat s buddies Bo and Tak whose names are components of the Malay word botak bald 21 The two are styled after comic characters of traditional wayang kulit shadow play 19 Bo is the more intelligent of the pair while Tak has a tendency to be a show off 11 Other supporting characters include Normah a girl formerly from the city and Mrs Hew Mat s teacher 22 The Malay and English voices of the characters were dubbed by Malaysian voice actors Child actors were employed for the younger roles 10 however Mat Ana Bo and Tak were voiced by actors who were in their early twenties 23 24 Certain actors had the task of voicing multiple roles for example the voice director was responsible for speaking the roles of Yah and Mrs Hew Initially voice talents were hired in Los Angeles to dub the English version but they kept slipping into a Jamaican accent 10 Although this soundtrack was not used in the series the producers felt it was too humorous to waste and included it in The Making of Kampung Boy 10 which was broadcast a week before the start of the series 25 SettingWhereas Kampung Boy the comic book was based on life in the 1950s its animation spin off was set in the 1990s 14 Although the scenery and details are exaggerated the animation is accurate in its depiction of the Malaysian village and the life of its inhabitants 26 Dr Rohani Hashim of Universiti Sains Malaysia s School of Communication called the series a detailed recreation of a rural Malay childhood 27 The layout of Mat s village and the style of its houses are patterned after those in the rural areas of Perak where clusters of houses line a river which provides water for the villagers needs The children play in the surrounding jungle while the adults toil in the fields and commute to the city to work 28 Saperstein directed the use of warm and soft colours in the series this colour scheme was modelled after that of Winnie the Pooh 10 bestowing a soft cuddly feel according to Far Eastern Economic Review journalist S Jayasankaran to the animation 8 Much of the show s visuals followed Lat s art style Outlines are drawn in a bold manner making objects stand out from the background an effect particularly aided by the rich use of brown green and yellow as the dominant colours The last two colours are heavily used in the depictions of nature contrasting well with each other and separating the background from the middle ground Aside from being the main colour for the houses brown is used as the skin tone of the characters Drawn with short and round shapes Mat and his fellow Malays are highlighted with bright colours 19 Themes and hallmarksKampung Boy s episodes follow a structure reminiscent of Hollywood cartoons Each episode contains two separate stories whose themes interweave each other as the show switches between scenes of the two stories By the end of the episode the two threads are resolved by a common idea Generally one story focuses on the kampung children and the other on the adults 29 The creators of Kampung Boy refrained from copying ideas commonly found in Western and Japanese cartoons Other Malaysian animations produced since the 1990s have not been as meticulously faithful to portraying images and themes familiar to the locals For example Sang Wira s 1996 protagonist bears a striking resemblance to Doraemon and the bear and bee in Ngat dan Taboh 2002 play out antics similar to those of Tom and Jerry Lat s close involvement with the project kept its portrayals faithful to Malaysian culture 17 Kampung life in the animation features true blue Malaysian elements such as supernatural superstitions pontianaks or female vampires monkeys trained to pluck coconuts and traditions that are forgotten in the transition from rural to urban living 10 30 The cartoon series explores ideas through the activities of the characters especially their interactions with one another 21 Rohani classified the genre of the show as comedy drama 1 According to her the main theme in Kampung Boy is nostalgia carrying Lat s intention to portray rural childhood as a much more interesting and creative experience than growing up in an urban environment 26 Several episodes champion the kampung way of life In Antara Jaguh amp Rakan Between Champions or Friends Mat and his friends defeat a city soccer team because of their toughness bred from doing hard work in the village SiMat Manusia Pintar Smart Like a Flying Fox suggests that the unpolluted environment of the kampung promotes the upbringing of a healthier and more intelligent child Normah arrives from the city in Mat Main Wayang The Shadow Knows and although she disdains the kampung initially she is won over by the villagers tenderness toward her 31 The intrusion of modern technology and attitudes into this idyllic kampung way of life is also a main topic in the series 21 Several episodes introduce electrical appliances and ideas associated with urban lifestyles to the villagers 8 10 For example the convenience of motor cars versus the traditional use of bullock carts is debated by the characters in Naik Keretaku Dad s Driving Test Despite the show s support of the kampung lifestyle it portrays aspects of modern living in a positive light as well Opah an old woman is depicted as a capable modern woman proficient in driving a van and fixing televisions 32 The city is characterized as a gateway to a range of cultures and ideas that are not found in a Malaysian rural village as illustrated in the encounter and formation of a friendship between Mat and a Chinese boy in Naik Keretaku 33 The series also explores changes in Malaysian rural society that had taken place during the 1950s to 1990s For example through flashbacks Yah Kahwinkan Kami Well Marry Us displays traditional marriage customs that are no longer practiced by urban dwellers Family ties are shown to be strong in the rural community family members show close attention and concern to one another Conversely those who immersed themselves in city life are depicted to have lost their communal bonds Although Mat s family is depicted to follow the rules of the Malay patriarchal society modern values are in its portrayal Yap does not leave the responsibilities of child rearing all to Yah he takes care of Ana while she watches over Mat Although the series presents the female characters as housewives it makes the point in Nasib Si Gadis Desa It s a Girl s Life that the traditional family role of the Malay woman is as equal and valuable as the man s The episode also mentions the achievements of women in careers such as space exploration and science 34 Overall Rohani said Lat s cartoon series was subtly recording a story of rapidly vanishing Malay tradition and innocence while advising viewers to consider the societal changes around them 27 According to her the cartoonist s concern was to inspire the audience to consider the pace of urbanisation and to realise that the adoption or rejection of new values is a common decision by them 35 The show in her opinion suggests that changes should be carefully examined and adopted only if beneficial to the society Furthermore the adoption of new ideas and culture should be a gradual process and the changes tailored accordingly to the society 36 Reception legacy and achievementsKampung Boy was submitted to the 1999 Annecy International Animated Film Festival in France One of its episodes Oh Tok won the Best Animation for a television series of 13 minutes and more 37 The episode was about a spooky banyan tree that became the object of Mat s fear 8 Because of the local contents in the animation and the nostalgic appeal of the kampung lifestyle Malaysian comics scholar Muliyadi Mahamood expected success for Kampung Boy in his country 21 The 26 episode series was popular with the young and received positive reviews for technical details and content 38 39 It has also attracted criticism for similarities to United States cartoon series The Simpsons audiences noticed that Mat s Malaysian family was similar in several ways to Bart Simpson s dysfunctional American family Similarly some critics pointed out that the English spoken in Kampung Boy is substantially different from Malaysian English which is heavily influenced by British English 19 reporter Daryl Goh perceived an American accent to the English language voices 11 Lat explained that the producers had to tone down the use of traditional Malay customs locales and language to market the series to a wider global audience Rohani found the decision regrettable it made the animation less than an authentic Malay product 19 The animation was regarded by Dr Paulette Dellios of Bond University s School of Humanities and Social Sciences as a cultural artefact a reminder and preservation of a country s old way of life created and produced by an international team and displayed via modern technologies to the world 40 According to Rohani Kampung Boy was a record of Malay traditions and transitions experienced by the rural community during the 1950s to 1990s 36 Among the several Malaysian animations that used local settings Lat s series was in veteran film director Hassan Abdul Muthalib s view the best in portraying the country s culture and traditions Hassan also said that the success in marketing the series overseas made Kampung Boy the benchmark for Malaysia s animation industry 18 References a b c Rohani 2005 p 390 Lat 2001 pp 153 154 Lent 2008 p 32 a b c Muliyadi 2001 p 146 Unhealthy Elements 2004 Crossings Datuk Lat 2003 39 35 40 07 41 09 41 41 Campbell 2007 a b c d e f g h Jayasankaran 1999 p 36 a b c d Lat 2001 p 154 a b c d e f g h Manavalan 1999 a b c d e f Goh 1999 Hassan 2007 p 296 DeMott 2004 a b Lat Cartoon Series 1996 Muliyadi 2001 p 145 Seneviratne 2002 a b Hassan 2007 p 292 a b Hassan 2007 p 293 a b c d e Rohani 2005 p 391 Rohani 2005 p 397 a b c d Muliyadi 2001 p 147 Rohani 2005 pp 391 392 Haliza 2000 Chandran 2005 Haliza 1999a a b Rohani 2005 p 392 a b Rohani 2005 p 389 Rohani 2005 pp 392 394 396 398 Hassan 2007 pp 292 293 Rohani 2005 p 396 Rohani 2005 pp 394 395 Rohani 2005 pp 393 394 Rohani 2005 p 394 Rohani 2005 pp 396 397 Rohani 2005 p 395 a b Rohani 2005 p 398 Haliza 1999b Muliyadi 2001 pp 147 148 More than a Cartoonist 2007 p 257 Dellios 2000 p 1 BibliographyInterviews self introspectives Campbell Eddie Lat subject 15 January 2007 Campbell Interviews Lat Part 3 First Hand Books Doodles and Dailies New York United States First Second Books Archived from the original on 23 June 2008 Retrieved 13 March 2010 Lat 2001 Vignette Notes of a Cartoonist Temporarily Turned Animator In Lent John ed Animation in Asia and the Pacific Indiana United States Indiana University Press pp 153 154 ISBN 0 253 34035 7 Academic sources Dellios Paulette 2000 Museums in the Global Kampung Mixed Messages Culture Mandala The Bulletin of the Centre for East West Cultural and Economic Studies Queensland Australia Bond University 4 1 1 8 ISSN 1322 6916 Retrieved 10 March 2010 Lent John 2008 Asian Animation and Its Search for National Identity and Global Markets 1 ASIFA Magazine The International Animation Journal Vol 21 no 1 Hertfordshire United Kingdom John Libbey Publishing pp 31 41 Muliyadi Mahamood 2001 The History of Malaysian Animated Cartoons In Lent John ed Animation in Asia and the Pacific Indiana United States Indiana University Press pp 131 152 ISBN 0 253 34035 7 Rohani Hashim 2005 Lat s Kampong Boy Rural Malays in Tradition and Transition In Palmer Edwina ed Asian Futures Asian Traditions Kent United Kingdom Global Oriental pp 389 400 ISBN 1 901903 16 8 Hassan Abdullah Muthalib June 2007 From Mousedeer to Mouse Malaysian Animation at the Crossroads Inter Asia Cultural Studies Southeast Asian Cinema Hong Kong Dow Jones amp Company 8 2 288 297 doi 10 1080 14649370701238755 ISSN 1464 9373 S2CID 54991062 IDNumber 512199 Journalistic sources Chandran Sheela 10 July 2005 Smile with Shiera The Star Selangor Malaysia Star Publications Archived from the original on 19 August 2010 Retrieved 19 August 2010 Crossings Datuk Lat Television production Singapore Discovery Networks Asia 21 September 2003 DeMott Rick 9 November 2004 Nick Asia To Air Annecy Winning Kampung Boy AWN com Los Angeles United States Animation World Network Archived from the original on 18 August 2010 Retrieved 16 July 2010 Goh Daryl 27 August 1999 Lat s of Village People The Star Selangor Malaysia Star Publications Archived from the original on 13 February 2005 Retrieved 26 August 2010 Haliza Ahmad 19 August 1999a Kampung Boy Arrives The Malay Mail Kuala Lumpur Malaysia New Straits Times Press p 11 ProQuest 326156898 Haliza Ahmad 24 December 1999b Annecy Awards 99 for Lat s Kampung Boy The Malay Mail Kuala Lumpur Malaysia New Straits Times Press p 15 ProQuest 326120280 Haliza Ahmad 24 July 2000 Voices Behind Kampung Boy Characters The Malay Mail Kuala Lumpur Malaysia New Straits Times Press p 23 ProQuest 326158346 Jayasankaran S 22 July 1999 Going Global Far Eastern Economic Review Hong Kong Dow Jones amp Company 162 29 35 36 ISSN 0014 7591 ProQuest 208233691 Manavalan Theresa 4 July 1999 Kampung Boy Hits Big Time New Sunday Times Kuala Lumpur Malaysia New Straits Times Press p 10 ProQuest 266437109 Lat Cartoon Series to Debut on Astro TV New Straits Times Kuala Lumpur Malaysia New Straits Times Press 26 November 1996 p 9 ProQuest 269096934 More than a Cartoonist Annual Business Economic and Political Review Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Oxford Business Group 2 Emerging Malaysia 2007 257 258 January 2007 ISSN 1755 232X Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Retrieved 4 December 2010 Seneviratne Kalinga 12 December 2002 Asia s Animation Industry Spreads Its Wings Asia Times Online Hong Kong Inter Press Service Archived from the original on 17 November 2004 Retrieved 19 August 2010 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Unhealthy Elements Invading Local Cartoon Industry Says Lat Financial Times Kuala Lumpur Financial Times Group Bernama 7 February 2004 p 1 ProQuest 447834102 External linksKampung Boy at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kampung Boy TV series amp oldid 1135057514, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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