Eulis Atjih

Eulis Atjih is a 1927 film from the Dutch East Indies (modern-day Indonesia); it was the second feature film produced in the country, after Loetoeng Kasaroeng in 1926.

The silent film follows the lives of a native Indonesian family sent into poverty by the husband's splurging. Eulis Atjih was a commercial success in the Indies, but failed in international markets.

Eulis Atjih
Eulis Atjih
Newspaper advertisement
Directed byG. Krugers
Written byJoehana
Starring
  • Arsad
  • Soekria
Production
company
Java Film Co.
Release date
  • 1927 (1927) (Dutch East Indies)
CountryDutch East Indies

Premise

A native Indonesian man leaves his beautiful young wife Eulis Atjih and their child to lead a life of partying. She falls into poverty and, when he returns several years later, he is also poor.

Production

Eulis Atjih was produced by Java Film Co., which had made the first film in the Dutch East Indies, Loetoeng Kasaroeng, in 1926. The earlier film had left Java Film Coy in a poor financial after it underperformed; as such, for Eulis Atjih the company had to find financial backers. The film was directed by G. Krugers and based on the novel by Joehana. The film featured native Indonesian actors, including Arsad and Soekria. It was a black and white, silent film.

Eulis Atjih was the second film to include native Indonesians in its cast, and the second feature film produced in the country. The native role was emphasised in the film's promotion; a poster for a screening at the Orient Theatre in Surabaya, for example, wrote that the film's native cast was equal to any American or European one. Of note is the film's use of the word "Indonesia", which was not to be formalised as a preferred term for the archipelago until the Youth Pledge in 1928.

Themes

The Indonesian film historian Misbach Yusa Biran writes that the film educated Dutchmen through its depiction of native Indonesian rites, including funerals and marriage, as well as sent a message to native audiences that splurging would only result in poverty.

Release and reception

Eulis Atjih was released in 1927, being screened in Bandung in August and in Surabaya in September. It was a critical and commercial success in the country, especially among the ethnic Chinese community; the newspaper Pewarta Soerabaja wrote that the actress who played Eulis was "beautiful when her life was carefree, but looked like a villager when she fell poor." In Surabaya, the film was accompanied by music from the keroncong group under Tuan Kayoon.

For international release, the Java Film Co. and Krugers emphasised the ethnographic aspects of the film. It was shown in Singapore, but was a commercial failure.

See also

Notes

References

    Footnotes

Tags:

Eulis Atjih PremiseEulis Atjih ProductionEulis Atjih ThemesEulis Atjih Release and receptionEulis Atjih

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Kim Soo-hyunDream11Shannen Doherty2024 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly electionWordleSean CombsAshley JuddKyle MacLachlanBhimaaLate Night with the DevilAmar Singh Chamkila (film)Channing TatumCarol BurnettDubaiColumbia UniversityHumane (film)OnlyFansSouth AfricaTokugawa shogunateShaquille O'NealDavid BeckhamSalman RushdieJustin HubnerGina GershonSigmund FreudSpencer RattlerResults of the 2019 Indian general electionRichard Williams (tennis coach)TemperatureInterstellar (film)European UnionBernie SandersDev PatelRageh OmaarAnya Taylor-JoyDwayne JohnsonFootball at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Men's qualificationJ. J. McCarthyMadison BeerBob MarleyMandisaSofia BoutellaSugar (2024 TV series)Orlando BloomDavid PeckerChris PhilpAnzac DayMurder of Reena VirkVietnam WarSiren (2024 film)Winston ChurchillRichard NixonCillian MurphyDallas TurnerAadhaarDrake MayeStephen HawkingNelson MandelaUnsimulated sex2024 NFL draftThe Tortured Poets DepartmentFallout (American TV series)Tyler GuytonGeorge SorosPatrick MahomesGuy RitchieKeffiyehAsmir BegovićKaya ScodelarioIndiaEdward VIIIJoe AlwynBarry KeoghanTom CruiseUtsuro-buneAriana GrandeClint EastwoodMurder of Asunta Basterra🡆 More