DEADBEAT....Namewee
plays a deadbeat single dad entrusted to unite three gangs of thugs.
By : CHEW WAN YING
THERE'S no such thing as bad
publicity—or is there? When Namewee's directorial debut, Nasi Lemak 2.0,
premiered last year, he was greeted by protesters from Pertubuhan Gagasan
Rakyat Didahulukan outside movie theatres, and the movie itself was pulled off
by Golden Screen Cinemas two weeks into its release after Astro secured the TV
rights for it.
With all that drama and
other rumours swirling around the movie, it was enough to raise its box-office
gross to RM7 million, seven times more than what it cost to make. But at the
recent launch of his second effort, Hantu Gangster, the 29-year-old filmmaker
said he had other things on his mind besides money.
"If [what happened to
Nasi Lemak 2.0] happens again [with Hantu Gangster], I won’t be able to make
another movie," he said. "No one would want to do a movie with me. I
will be suppressed in the long run and everyone will be against me—and I have
no backing."
"I don't even think
about the box-office," he added. "My biggest concern is whether it'll
be shown in the cinemas without being taken down halfway through."
HANTU.....Amber
Chia in a scene from 'Hantu Gangster'.
He's got reason to worry.
He's been a magnet for controversy ever since his parody of the national anthem
made headlines in 2007. His defence of southern (Muar) Mandarin and his tirade
against TNB haven't won him many fans among the conservative majority nor
endeared him to the authorities.
So to lessen his chances of
getting thrown to the wolves again, Namewee—real name Wee Meng Chee—decided to
shift the plot of Hantu Gangster to 1997.
"It would be far too
sensitive if the movie was set in today [but] because it's 1997, I can say
whatever I want," he explained, and then added in his usual hyperbole,
"I daresay this is the most controversial film in Malaysian history."
Hantu Gangster, which stars
Farid Kamil, Diana Danielle, Jalaluddin Hassan, Mizz Nina, Amber Chia and
Dennis Lau, centres on three gangs from different races who turn on each other
after their decades-old alliance falls apart.
The movie made it past the
Film Censorship Board with only 19 cuts, and is slated to open on Thursday, 9th
August 2012.
GHOSTS.....David
Arumugam, Jalaluddin Hassan and Charlie Loke as ghosts.
Critics will no doubt crow:
Not another feel-good 1Malaysia comedy from the rebel artiste? But Namewee
denies he's heading on purpose.
"I put three races in
there because that's life in Malaysia. A Malaysian movie is not just
pure-Chinese or pure-Malay. … People ask me, are you doing a Chinese movie or a
Malay movie? I tell them it's a Malaysian movie. What matters is not the
language but the Malaysian culture portrayed in the movie."
He's not glamorising street
thugs either. "Gangsters are usually portrayed as violent and uncivilised.
We just want to portray another side of these people, like how they lead their
lives with their families. Some of them are not evil. They're in the business
for survival," he said.
Hantu Gangster also sees him
removing his trademark beanie for the first time. "I took it off for this
movie [because] people thought I had something on my scalp. I also dyed my hair
blonde because that was the hot trend in 1997."
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