Coming home at last
> Primeworks Studios’ latest film Pulang is based on a story that is very close to the heart of its CEO Ahmad Izham Omar
Dawson.
Directed by Kabir Bhatia and made with a budget of RM6 million, Pulang will hit cinemas nationwide on July 26.
The film is set in various locations including Malacca, Hong Kong, Okinawa, Jeju Island and Liverpool.
When asked what was his biggest challenge bringing the story to the big screen, Kabir says: “The film spans from the 1940s to 2010, and I have to make sure I am historically correct, especially with the setting.” Kabir and his team looked at pictures from 1940s, and used CGI (computer generated imagery) to recreate the settings. Some quarters have labelled Pulang as Ahmad’s ‘syok sendiri’ (vanity) project, and accused him of abusing his power to get the film made. But Ahmad dismissed the notion. “This is not just my story,” he says. “This is a story about our country, too. I am telling a part of our history that has been forgotten.” While researching the past for this story, he learned that in the 40s, many Malay men left their families behind to work as seamen on merchant ships plying the oceans. “The captains of these merchant ships liked hiring Malays because they made better seamen,” ahamd says. “I wanted to show that our ancestors had travelled and seen the world ... and it is about time for us to be proud of them.”
His research included reading Tim Bunnell’s book, From World City to the World in One City: Liverpool through Malay Lives.
Bunnell, an associate professor in the Department of Geography at the National University of Singapore, traced the migration of Malay sailors from Singapore and Malaya who settled in England during the 1950s and 60s.
On the message of the film, Ahmad says: “Life may give you interesting adventures. But your adventures means nothing if you have no family to come home to.”
Lead actor Remy ( above) also believes the film highlights the importance of family. The actor confessed that he initially had a hostile relationship with his own father. “I came from a broken family,” he says. “My parents divorced when I was 13. My father was an army man, and he was very strict with me. I did not like him. I was distant from him.” Remy was totally captivated by the script and the depictions of the relationship between a father and his son, and the relationship between a grandfather and grandson, touched his heart. It eventually pushed Remy to reconcile with his own estranged father, and now both father and son share a warm relationship. “Sometimes, a good script can make you a better man,” Remy says.