Straits Times   /   Singapore
 
June 30, 2010 
Obama movie set for debut 

 
JAKARTA - A FILM about US President Barack Obama's childhood days in  
Indonesia debuts in Jakarta on Wednesday, promising a very different 
perspective  
on the man in the White House.  
The film, Obama Anak Menteng or Obama the Menteng Kid, is set in the 
upscale  Jakarta neighbourhood of Menteng where Mr Obama lived from 1967 to 
1971 
with his  mother and Indonesian stepfather.  
Co-director Damien Dematra said it would show the US president in a light  
that Americans might find strange. 'Viewers, especially Westerners, will see 
a  different world. They'll see Obama eating chicken satay, not hamburgers. 
They'll  see his neighbours and friends wearing chequered sarongs and 
Muslim caps,' he  told AFP.  
Even so, producers skirted controversy surrounding the extent that Islam  
influenced Mr Obama's early years in the world's most populous 
Muslim-majority  country. A scene showing Mr Obama, who is Christian, praying 
like a 
Muslim was  dropped as it was deemed 'too political,' Mr Dematra said. 'He was 
just  imitating other kids when they were praying but it didn't mean he wanted 
to be  Muslim. That scene wasn't even shot because I didn't want people to 
take it out  of context and use it against him,' he said. Based on his 
interviews with Mr  Obama's surviving neighbours and friends in the Indonesian 
capital, Mr Dematra  claims the film is '60 per cent fact and 40 per cent 
fiction.'  
It features a cast of little-known Indonesian actors and was filmed in just 
 over a month in the West Java city of Bandung - which retains some of the 
sleepy  charm of 1960s Menteng. Its budget was US$1 million (S$1.4 million), 
Mr Dematra  said. Twelve-year-old American Hasan Faruq Ali plays Mr Obama, 
or Barry as the  president was known to his schoolmates. Like Mr Obama, Ali 
- who had no prior  acting experience - is the son of a mixed-race couple 
and moved from the United  States to Indonesia as a toddler. He speaks 
Indonesian and English, just as Mr  Obama switched between his mother-tongue 
with 
his parents and Indonesian with  his friends.  
Clips available on the Internet show 'little Barry' learning to box with 
his  stepfather after getting into a shoolyard fight, but ultimately learning 
to  resolve conflicts through means other than violence. Mr Dematra said he 
did not  want the film to be political, but to give viewers a sense of how 
Indonesia's  cultural diversity - mostly Muslim but with significant Hindu, 
Christian and  other minorities - might have influenced 'this pluralist and 
inspiring figure.'  -- AFP

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