1965 (2015) Poster

(2015)

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5/10
An ambitious – but vain – attempt to weave a compelling piece of fiction from history, this dramatically inert drama is no better than an officious pseudo-documentary
moviexclusive24 July 2015
If there is one thing that '1965' has going for it, it is hype. Long before its multi-hyphenate executive producer/co-writer/co-director Daniel Yun explained what his passion project was all about, speculation was rife that it would be a biopic about Singapore's founding father, and even rumours of Tony Leung Chiu-Wai playing our very own Lee Kuan Yew. Unfortunately, all that hype has amounted to pretty much nothing, as '1965' is no better than a stodgy pseudo-documentary.

Narrated like a didactic piece of politically correct propaganda by Sezairi Sezali, it opens in present day with Sezali and lead actor Qi Yuwu's real-life fathers playing older versions of their characters, who we are told have survived the tumultuous period of the early 1960s very different from the Singapore we know today. Just before we are dropped into 3 September 1964, we get a glimpse of LKY preparing for his iconic national address the year after, which we realise later is meant to bookend the fictional parts of the film. But yes, it is on that fateful day where a Malay trishaw rider was found murdered in Geylang that we are first introduced to the various characters whose fates will intertwine over the course of the film.

There is Qi Yuwu's police inspector Cheng, a doting husband to his wife Mei (Nicole Seah) and daughter Xiao Yun. There is James Seah's Seng, brother to Cheng and leader of a group of educated intellectuals purportedly fighting for Chinese rights. Seng is in love with Jun (Joanne Peh), a simple-minded girl who spends her days helping her father out in his coffee shop in Chinatown. On the other side of the racial divide is Deanna Yusoff's Khatijah, a fruit seller in Geylang with four sons, among them Sezali's new recruit Adi and the youngest named Rafi. In the ensuing melee, Rafi dies from a head injury as Khatijah looks helplessly on, her pleas to Cheng to save her son falling on deaf ears because Cheng is apparently shell-shocked to see Seng instigating the violence.

It's an awkward scene to say the very least, not only because of bad framing but also because the camera lingers too long on Yuwu's (already) blank face and Yusoff's histrionic crying. It doesn't help that Sezali has to add an intrusive voice-over at the end of it to practically tell us how to interpret the racially drawn conflict, almost as if the filmmakers couldn't trust their audience to be discerning enough. Ditto for the second half, which leapfrogs a few months later to the Chinese New Year celebrations in 1965, that sees Xiao Yun being kidnapped and the Malays being fingered for her disappearance.

Indeed, somewhere in the severely neutered narrative is a poignant reminder of how the cloud of distrust between the Malays and the Chinese led to fomenting tensions, especially with Khatijah blaming Cheng for the death of her youngest child and Cheng suspecting that his daughter was kidnapped by the Malays in a tit-for-tat move. Yet in spite of a potentially explosive setup, there is absolutely no dramatic tension in the storytelling.

To give Yun, his director Randy Ang, and co-screenwriter Andrew Ngin the benefit of the doubt, it could not have been easy navigating the bureaucracy to produce a film about the racial riots, which probably explains why the portrayal of the interracial discord seems so dispassionate. Yet, this doesn't excuse the clumsy staging, the melodramatic excesses or the tepid pace. Even the finale where Cheng and Seng confront Xiao Yun's kidnappers unfolds in the most unexciting manner, squandering any opportunity to exploit what artistic license they have over the material into anything genuinely engaging.

That feeling of missed opportunity also pretty much sums up our sentiments towards the first Singapore film to portray LKY. Not only do the filmmakers fail to deconstruct the aura of the man for a younger generation who had not lived through Singapore's founding years, they also fail to weave the few scenes of LKY preaching his ideology of a multi-racial Singapore into a compelling theme with the fictional narrative, so much so that Kay Tong's appearances end up no better than a distracting sideshow that belong in a different movie altogether.

Indeed, even the cast with their committed performances can't quite lift the material from its own tedium, that combines a generally unengaging story with dull, or worse, clumsy execution and preachy moralistic overtones that better suit an officious historical account than a supposed work of dramatic fiction. It couldn't have been easy to fashion a movie around Singapore's independence – not to mention one that has the "SG50" stamp of approval from the authorities – and there are evident traces of that ambition on screen, such as the true-to- life sets constructed for the outdoor filming and the sheer number of extras employed to depict the riot scenes; yet, that ambition has not itself translated into a film of much filmmaking merit, be it in plot, character or just plain mise-en-scène. '1965' is, after all that hype, sadly and rather hugely underwhelming, if not for anything than a squandered chance to mine our country's vivid history into something equally compelling for the big screen.
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6/10
A racially-divided Singapore, before independence
dy15816 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
There are three prominent moments in the history of Singapore which are being explored in this film: The aftermath of the racial riots on 21 July 1964, the undeclared war on terror in Singapore in what is called 'Konfrontasi', and Singapore's eventual separation from Malaysia on 9 August 1965. In fact, it is the final moment which formed the basis for the film title. And that was what opened the film, revisiting the first part of when Singapore's first prime minister in the late Lee Kuan Yew (with his younger self being played by Singapore's veteran theatre actor Lim Kay Tong) trying to explain the separation to local and foreign journalists which was also broadcasted on television throughout Singapore, when he broke down on television.

The film takes on a narrative format, with retired policeman Adil recalling and reflecting his time serving in the police force which also coincided some of Singapore's pre-independence turmoil, and his working relationship with his superior Seng during those times. When the story really began, it came during a time when Singapore was still living from the after-effects of the July 21 racial riots of 1964 when the Malays and Chinese had clashed during a procession. Everything had looked peaceful on the surface, but racial tensions still linger.

The film audience is also being introduced by this time to Adil's mother and youngest brother Rafi, Seng's family which included his younger idealistic Chinese-educated brother and charming daughter Xiao Yun, and the girlfriend of Seng's younger brother who helps out in her father's coffeeshop. Everyone leading their own lives despite the racial tensions, before how an argument which had started between a group of Malays and Chinese over the death of a Malay man broke the fragile peace on the streets of Singapore once again. The severity of the riot also brought out the curfew onto the streets.

But away from the casualties at the riot, came the start of a misunderstanding which would have consequences. Seng being accused of not helping a young Malay boy to safety during the riot by his mother, and the boy had died as a result. The boy is Adil's youngest brother. The misunderstandings which came as a result of that nearly led to Seng losing his cool when trying to find out what might had caused the disappearance of his daughter on the Chinese New Year of 1965.

While most of the characters are fictional, it is all based on what were happening in Singapore in the lead-up to the separation between Singapore and Malaysia. Only one person in the film is based on someone real, and it is the late Lee Kuan Yew. How his push for a Malaysia for all Malaysians did not work out, even if there were people as shown in the film who had worked hard to make life in Singapore not working along racial lines.

There is a sense of poignancy in terms of how the film came to end, coming to an end like how it began. It is a moment in time the older generation of Singaporeans remember, and the turmoil which preceded it. But that also what makes this film worthwhile, even if it may possibly look out of order at times especially for anyone who may not have much inkling of what took place before Singapore's eventual independence. And how those times still serve as a reminder of working towards a society not bounded by racial lines.
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6/10
A glimpse of Singapore's past
fantabulousch3 November 2020
For some reasons, I kinda like the film. Somehow I could connect with the tumultuous times my parents went thru, something I heard and read much about. I could also identify with how the different races communicated interchangeably in their own dialects and languages, something so uniquely Singapore. The riots scenes whether came across perfect or not, did not wipe away my imagination of how a small spark can set a fire burning. It is a sombre reminder of how the fabric of society depends on the magnanimity of every heart in every race, to preserve it. What our founding father has inculcated in Singapore about being a multi racial society should be embraced in our hearts for life, in the generations to come. We no longer look at each other from a different race but that we are Singaporeans first.
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1/10
Poorly acted and directed propaganda film
aisuru200114 June 2016
This movie was really deeply disappointing. It promised to be a film about the race riots but this was extremely superficial and lacked any explanatory power. The characters remained flat and spoke in stilted dialogue which was boring to watch and sometimes even painful. Many scenes are overly sentimental or emotionally exaggerated with the music and other horribly used effects. Moreover, there were a number of scenes which overdid the propaganda, for instance when praising Singapore's first prime minister Lee Kuan Yew. Two foreigners are seen talking how great the statesman is (very cheesy!). This made it clear that the movie was mainly done to memorialize the "founding father". This point was again emphasized at the end when the movie draws attention to his mourning period when people lined up to pay their last respects to the former leader (which is not central to the riots). At the same time, it is perhaps surprising that the actor playing Lee Kuan Yew is not at all convincing. If he was not called Lee Kuan Yew, it would be hard to guess who it is. In the end, the movie reminded me a little of the recent Chinese propaganda movies celebrating the origins of the Communist Party. Only that the quality was even worse.

In conclusion 1 out of 10. Do not waste your time with this attempt at a historical movie.
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1/10
Worst done important movie
lohcheemeng4 December 2018
For such an important movie about Singapore history, it is so poorly written and directed. This movie should not be aired for all its worth as it says to convey what was significant about the period and that's not yet even bringing the poor acting overall.
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