Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
Press Kit
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
Synopsis
A young man wakes up chained to metal chair in a room painted a sickening shade of pink and
illuminated by a single blinding block of neon lights placed at his right. A razorblade hangs on a
string before him, and sharp pink pencils are aimed at his left eye and stomach. He does not
know where he is or why he is there. Periodically, a beautiful young woman dressed in floral
summer dress enters the room and performs cruel and calculated acts of seemingly senseless
torture. Who is she? Why is she doing this? What has he done to deserve this? And most
importantly, will he survive?
Press Release
The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi), a raw, barebones, suspense-packed, experimental
thriller/horror flick geared to keeping audiences on the edge of their seats, is also the feature film
directorial debut of short filmmaker Paul F. Agusta, whose mini-movie presentations, such as
Fever and Lies that Bind, have been shown at art houses and cultural centers in Indonesia, while
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
his RTM 03.26 was also selected for showing at the Rotterdam Film Festival in the Netherlands
in 2006.
The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi) is also scheduled to screen at Q Film Festival in Jakarta
from August 7-16 this year, and is expected to be shown at a number of international film
festivals over the next few months.
The director of The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi), Paul Agusta, who is well known for his
provocative, if not radical views on filmmaking, has taken this movie as an opportunity to
continue his experimental exploration of how to bend, twist and rip apart the traditional
paradigms of filmmaking entrenched in Indonesian cinematic productions in an attempt to prove
that “it is not money that makes good movies, but good stories”.
Paul says that he strongly believes that legendary filmmaker and poet Jean Cocteau was right
when he said: "Film will only became an art when its materials are as inexpensive as pencil and
paper."
With The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi), Paul was intent on breaking all the set-in-stone
movie making rules he could to produce a credible cinematic work as creatively and as skillfully
as he could within as short a span of time possible (10 days of shooting) with a smaller budget
than most local filmmakers spend on catering alone.
“I chose to challenge myself and the talented young members of HouseofWaves Productions
film collective with the filming of a brilliant horror-thriller scenario written by gifted short-story
writer/novelist Dalih Sembiring from an idea I came up with in a conversation a couple of years
or so ago. We all endeavored to do this so that we could prove to ourselves that we could
actually make a feature film and not just daydream about it,” Paul explained.
According to Paul, The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi) is a story of love, loss, pain, sacrifice
and revenge; a mystery that unfolds into tragedy.
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi) stars seasoned actor Rifnu Wikana (9 Naga, Maaf Saya
Menghamili Istri Anda) in the leading male role of Yoga, a university student, who finds himself
caught up in a kind of horrible sadistic game he cannot guess the reason for; and multi-gifted
singer-songwriter Kartika Jahja in her film debut in the leading female role of Tika, a young
woman with a score to settle.
Supporting actors (all making their first appearance in a feature length film) are Jeffrey Sirie, as
a young husband whose life is shattered by unexpected events; Hukla Turangan, who plays Irma,
a carefree young woman who finds herself thrown into a desperate quest to save a life; Yoggie
Richard, as Luki, a college student who loses his first chance at love; Leha Patricia, as a high
school girl whose first love turns into a nightmare; and Ika Vantiani, a woman whose heart is so
hurt she cannot forgive.
“We believe and hope that the story itself will have meaning to audiences because it deals with
the most basic and darkest of human emotions, and how people struggle to come to grips with
them and often become consumed by them. And even though The Anniversary Gift might seem
too experimental to many contemporary Indonesian horror movie lovers, we felt like we had to
follow Paul’s creative intuition with this film,” said Yunita Candra, the producer of The
Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi).
“I also tend to believe that the human psyche can be much more terrifying than any ghosts or
demons,” Paul said.
“To me, the horror movie is one of the most difficult film genres to get right. I wanted to see if I
could really pull it off. I guess we’ll see from audience reaction; whether The Anniversary Gift
rivets people to their seats in terror, or bores them into a coma like a lot of the formula horror
flicks that have been coming out recently,” Paul said.
Makeup and Special Effects for The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi) were skillfully and
creatively handled by Indonesia’s legendary “horror flick master” Didin Syamsudin.
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
For more information about The Anniversary Gift (Kado Hari Jadi) please visit
http://www.vengeanceispink.com
Paul Agusta was born in Jakarta in1980 and studied film in America before returning to
Indonesia in 2003. This young moviemaker believes that video levels the playing field in
filmmaking of any kind due to its affordability and availability, and that the only true resource a
video-maker needs is a solid, well thought out idea; the rest is simply implementation. There is
no excuse for video-makers not to fulfill their creative urge, you can always beg, borrow, or steal
a camera. His short videos (mostly shot on borrowed or discarded cameras) have been included
in various local and international film events and screenings. Prior to 2007, Paul had been a
nationally known film critic, festival manager, and film curator. He has since resigned from
those previous careers to focus on his work as a film and video-maker. Kado Hari Jadi (The
Anniversary Gift) is his first feature film.
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
Born in Binjai, North Sumatera on May 4th, 1983. A graduate of English Literature, Gadjah
Mada University, Yogyakarta, he is currently working in Jakarta as a freelance writer, translator,
and editor. He has been writing fiction since senior high school. His short stories have been
published in newspapers, magazines, journals, as well as in anthologies with other writers. He
co-wrote a teen novel called Cha untuk Chayang with Abmi Handayani (2007, Gramedia Pustaka
Utama), now in its second printing. He has also been writing features for The Jakarta Post since
September 2007 under the pseudonym Daniel Rose. Kado Hari Jadi (The Anniversary Gift) is his
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
second attempt at writing a film script, the first one being an unfinished script called Bila Baik
Budi. Dalih Sembiring has recently completed his first solo novel, titled Nel, which is awaiting
publication.
Director’s Statement
With The Anniversary Gift, Dalih Sembiring and I wanted to examine the nature of love, loss,
the empty promise of vengeance, and the pain that those things bring along with them. We
wanted to dissect hatred and explore its core, as well as how it can turn the hater into something
as despicable, if not worst, than the cause of their hatred itself. As a director, I wanted to tell this
tale of pain in the most visceral way possible; I wanted with every fiber in my being to open a
way for the audience to feel every ounce of pain (physical and emotional), confusion, panic,
distress, and sadness experienced by the characters in the film. We accomplished this by taking
the rawest and most real visual approach we could come up with, which included (among other
things) the use of grainy VHS-C in the torture sections, handheld “home video”-style filming for
the flashbacks (with no additional lighting; only available light was used), and a tension-building
loose camera technique for the present-day scenes outside of the torture room. It is my sincere
hope that this film will provide the audience with an emotional experience that they won’t soon
forget.
It needed to be made because it is the culmination of a creative compulsion that could not be
denied. It needed to be made because it is a “first feature film” and that means there are others
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
(just ideas now) waiting in line for gained experience and enriched vision. It needed to be made
because it is a cathartic vehicle for a quarter century plus of creative and other life experiences
deemed capable of imploding a young director’s mind. It needed to be made so this previously
short-film director could prove to himself that he had the capacity to make a feature-length
movie. (And typically Paul Agusta set the bar as high as he could by selecting – in his own
words -- “one of the most difficult to pull off genres; the horror/thriller film”; then complicating
the process by setting an incredulously low budget {“money doesn’t make good movies, good
stories do”} and breaking all the movie making rules {“I have to follow my creative
intuition”}he could think of as creatively and as skillfully as he could in as short a span of time
as possible.)
“Kado Hari Jadi” (The Anniversary Gift) needed to be made because it is part of a collective
dream of a group of young filmmakers, movie lovers, and other creative souls who were trudging
along singly in the ranks of the many hopefuls that find their lives tangled inextricably in the
celluloid or video cables of the murky, muddy channels of mainstream movie making, before
gravitating together and deciding to cut and run from the pack with a bag full of crazy ideas and
mad dreams.
It needed to be made because “Kado Hari Jadi” started as a simple but powerful idea about how
emotion can be at once a powerfully positive force or the most destructive of elements in the life
of a human being. It then became a screenplay about love and hate; choices and constraints;
obsessions and denial; compassion and vengeance. It was a screenplay that, although the story
was dark and the horror genre isn’t my favorite mode of storytelling, thoroughly piqued my
interest and compelled me to want to see how it would come out in the more complex, layered
format that is the telling of a story on a screen.
It had to be made because, personally, I have traveled a long arduous path of setting aside my
personal aspirations for more practical considerations, and I simply couldn’t sit by and watch the
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
vision and potential of others with more talent and courage lie dormant for lack of
encouragement and cold, hard cash. So, even though filmmaking is not my field of material
endeavor (I am an editor and translator by profession), nor my one true passion (visual art), I do
love watching films – particularly the provocative kind, and I saw and acted on the potential I
saw in this story and in the young people telling it.
I believe in this film and what it says about contemporary global society and its penchant for
instant gratification and taking the easiest way out (in terms of the story itself and of the
decidedly difficult methods and process used to make the movie). And, most of all, I believe in
the houseofwaves film collective and their dream of opening up new paths for young artists in a
highly complex and difficult to break into field of endeavor. To me, in my current function as an
“executive producer”, it doesn’t matter whether I make any money from this investment or
whether the film is “well accepted” in a commercial sense because I know that it is a story that
needed telling and that I am helping people with significant talent to make the most of what they
have creatively.
-MARGARET ROSE GLADE AGUSTA
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
CREW
Executive Producers
Paul Agusta
Linda Hollands-Sjahlim
Producer
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
Yunita Candra
Line Producer
Paul Agusta
Assistant Director
Astrid Budi
Screenwriter
Dalih Sembiring
Story by
Paul Agusta
Dalih Sembiring
Director of Photography
Wahyu Wiryawan
Camera Operator/ Assistant Camera
Riri Munaf
Stunt Cameraman
James Graciano
Editors
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
Lucky Kuswandi
James Graciano
Sound Editor
Edo Gimbal
Soundman
Edo_Gimbal
Boomer/Assistant Soundman
James Graciano
Gaffer/Electrician
Edo_Gimbal
Propmaster
Vivi Fransisca
Art/Production Design Team
Edo_Gimbal
Astrid Budi
Kartika Jahja
Set Designer
Edo_Gimbal
Edo_Gimbal
Continuity Supervisor
Astrid Budi
Make-up and Special Effects
Didin Syamsudin
Make-up Assistants
Rika
Yeni
Wardrobe Master
Jeffrey Sirie
Wardrobe Assistant
Ria TC
Music by
Tika
Set Builders
Pak Idam
Edo_Gimbal
Wahyu Wiryawan
Still Photographers
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
Keke Tumbuan
Astrid Budi
Catering
Ibu Puji
Diana Saragih
Tarmudji
Dalih Sembiring
Edo_Gimbal
James Graciano
Edo_Gimbal
James Graciano
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
CAST
Perempuan 3 Ria TC
Media Coverage
1. “Rush Hour” Talk Show interview with Paul Agusta and Dalih Sembiring, KisFM
95.1FM Radio Jakarta, Tuesday, June/03/2008
Director Paul F. Agusta doesn't need to be told that horror films are the easiest to do but the most
difficult to get right. In fact, he was the person who first said it.
"I know that the film will not pass censorship," 28-year old Paul said of his latest offering, last
Saturday at his home in South Jakarta.
He paused, closed his eyes and continued. "But I am willing to stand by every creative decision
I've made."
Paul was born in Jakarta and studied film in America before returning to Indonesia in 2003.
After creating 22 short films and video clips -- most of them experimental -- Paul decided it was
time he gathered his team and made their first film.
"Every filmmaker eventually wants to step forward and do a full-length film," he said.
He believes the cinema is a voyeuristic and visceral experience. "I wanted to cross the
voyeuristic boundary between the audience and the film."
Kado Hari Jadi (The Anniversary Gift) *narrates' the torture of a man -- moving backwards as it
slowly reveals the answers to an irking question over the course of a single day.
"I went completely all the way to make the film not only scary, but also scarry," he said.
Sequences of scenes about what happened prior to the torture are shown in fragments, as the film
brings the audience closer to learning how the lives of three lovers intertwined.
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
The movie uses the color pink as a dominant feature in the decorations used for the film to create
a false sense of comfort, Paul said.
Shot with a 20-year old camera, Kado Hari Jadi aims to present reality as close as possible, then
butcher it and leave it bleeding -- as the audiences is rarely given room to breathe.
"I'm actually putting the audience at a safe distance. But I go out of my way to make sure that the
film leaves them feeling uncomfortable, angry or depressed," Paul, who decided on the story idea
with the script writer, Dalih Sembiring, said.
"The script was brilliant, dark and nihilistic, so I try to make the film as dark and as nihilistic."
Meanwhile, the actors and actresses involved gave performances that exceeded everyone's
expectation.
Kado Hari Jadi's cast includes young and new actors and actresses, including Jeffrey Sirie,
Hukla Turangan, Leha Patricia, Yoggie Richard and Kartika Jahja, a singer known for her
articulate and expressive songs.
In order to tighten the budget for the film, the team chose to sacrifice certain things, limiting the
budget to what was necessary.
Edo Gimbal, a crew member, managed to make a metal chair, which serves as the dominant prop
in the film.
As a result, the HouseofWaves production team was able to cut down the budget to less than Rp
50 million (US$ 5,705).
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
The production house uses a fair split system, which gives the team some space to fund their next
project.
"The system we used was accidentally a sharia system, and we see it as the most fair and
efficient way of making a film, where everybody gains ownership of the film," Paul said.
"We didn't spend too much on lights, locations, catering, and we tried to hire only the necessary
crew members for the film; and we were lucky because the story itself is minimalist," he said.
The entire shoot was done in 10 days, which included a day off for the crew.
In the end, the team leaves it to the audience to make the most of the film, which will not be
screened in theaters. It will be released in DVD format in Indonesia in July 2008 by an
independent DVD distribution label, the Marshall Plan.
"I think the best horror films are sharp, painful and visceral, not the ones that jump out and scare
you," Paul said.
"All I can say to my target audience is that this is it, and your response finishes the film." (lva)
Screenings to date
Jakarta:
Press Screening: 30 June 2008, Vixen Space, Jl. Benda no.89, Kemang, Jakarta
Public Screenings:
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
1. 19 July 2008, Galeri Cemara 6, Jl. HOS. Cokroaminoto No: 9 - 11 Menteng, Jakarta
10350
2. 20 July 2008, Moe Music & Lounge, Jl. Mandar Utama, komp. Ruko multiguna Blok 8
A-B, Sector 3A, Bintaro Jaya
3. 9 August 2008, KineForum Taman Ismail Marzuki, Jl. Cikini Raya no.73 (as part of Q!
Film Festival 2008)
Yogyakarta:
Public Screenings:
1. 4 July 2008, Kinoki, Jl. Abu Bakar Ali No. 2. Yogyakarta (WORLD PREMIERE)
2. 7 July 2008, American Corner Library, English Literature Department, Gajah Mada
University, Yogyakarta
3. 19 August 2008, Kinoki, Jl. Abu Bakar Ali No. 2. Yogyakarta
Bandung:
Public Screenings:
1. 11 July 2008, Rumah Buku, Jl. Hegarmanah No.52, Bandung
2. 12 July 2008, Soemardja Gallery, Fine Arts Department, Bandung Institute of
Technology, Bandung
3.
Semarang:
Public Screening:
1. 14 August 2008, IMPORTAL VideoRoom, Gedung Widya Mitra, Jl. Singosari 2 No. 12
Semarang
houseofwaves productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan No. 308, Jl. Palmerah Selatan 20 – 21 A, Jakarta Selatan 10270
HouseofWaves Productions
Apartemen Permata Senayan Unit 308
Jl. Palmerah Selatan Kav. 20-21A
Jakarta Selatan
Jakarta 10270
INDONESIA
Email: houseofwaves@yahoo.com
Fax: (62)-(21)-536-4018
Telephone: (+62)-(857)-1031-3956