[Insert Course Name, e.g., Southeast Asian Cinema & Literature] Date: [Insert Date]
The film follows Zainuddin (Herjunot Ali), a young, poor, and orphaned Minangkabau man who falls in love with Hayati (Pevita Pearce), a woman of high nobility ( bangsawan ) from a prosperous family in Batipuh. Hayati’s family and her uncle, Datuk Meringgih, forbid the union due to Zainuddin’s lack of lineage and wealth. Heartbroken, Zainuddin moves to Makassar, becomes a successful journalist, and befriends a mixed-race woman named Mulia (Revalina S. Temat). Years later, Hayati, now unhappily engaged to the wealthy but boorish Aziz, reunites with Zainuddin on a voyage aboard the steamship Van Der Wijck . Hayati confesses her enduring love, but before they can reconcile, the ship sinks in a storm, resulting in Hayati’s death. Zainuddin survives but succumbs to grief. tenggelamnya kapal van der wijck movie
Soraya’s direction employs a dual aesthetic. Land scenes in West Sumatra are shot with warm, golden hues, emphasizing the nostalgia and suffocating beauty of kampung (village) life. In contrast, Makassar is depicted with cooler, blue tones, representing Zainuddin’s melancholic exile. The sinking sequence is the film’s technical zenith: using CGI and practical water effects, Soraya creates chaos that contrasts sharply with the slow, deliberate pacing of the romantic first half. The underwater shots of Hayati’s hair floating in the dark abyss serve as a haunting visual metaphor for lost potential. [Insert Course Name, e
Unlike a Hollywood romance where love conquers all, Hamka’s story (and Soraya’s adaptation) uses death to enforce a stern Islamic and moral lesson: obedience to parents and community is paramount, and transgression leads to ruin. However, the film complicates this reading. Hayati’s death is not a punishment for love but for indecision. She fails to defy her family openly and fails to commit to Zainuddin in Makassar. The sinking becomes a purgatorial event—washing away the sins of pride (Hayati’s family), greed (Aziz), and resentment (Zainuddin). Only through loss does Zainuddin achieve literary fame, writing the novel of their story as an act of eternal remembrance. Temat)
Tenggelamnya Kapal Van Der Wijck (The Sinking of the Van Der Wijck), originally a 1938 novel by Hamka (Haji Abdul Malik Karim Amrullah), was adapted into a feature film in 2013 by Sunil Soraya. The narrative, set in the Dutch East Indies (modern-day Indonesia) in the early 20th century, transcends its romantic plot to serve as a critique of Minangkabau adat (customary law) and colonial social hierarchy. This paper argues that the film uses the central tragedy—the sinking of the ship—not merely as a dramatic climax, but as a metaphorical deus ex machina that forcibly dismantles the artificial social boundaries erected by both tradition and colonial modernity.