Sumolah
Sumolah
| 10 May 2007 (USA)
Sumolah Trailers

Ramlee (Afdlin Shauki) is a Malay boy doomer who can't seem to settle job, much to his Mother's (Kartina Aziz) disappointment. Out of a job and out of money, he stumble upon across a sushi challenge by restaurant owner Honda (Patrik Teoh) Hungry and desperate, Ramlee attempts the challenge, and fails. In compensation, Honda lets Ramlee take a job at the restaurant to pay off his due. Ramlee becomes a member of the shop staff, along with Haris (Awie) and Andy (Radhi Khalid). He learns that a part of his obligation is to participate in the Malaysia Sushi Association Amateur Sumo Wrestling Championships held by Japanese sushi restaurant owners.

Reviews
ReaderKenka

Let's be realistic.

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SpecialsTarget

Disturbing yet enthralling

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Roy Hart

If you're interested in the topic at hand, you should just watch it and judge yourself because the reviews have gone very biased by people that didn't even watch it and just hate (or love) the creator. I liked it, it was well written, narrated, and directed and it was about a topic that interests me.

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Patience Watson

One of those movie experiences that is so good it makes you realize you've been grading everything else on a curve.

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ichocolat

This movie revolved around Ramlee (Afdlin Shauki), a Malay boy who didn't have a steady job, much to his mother's (Kartina Aziz) disappointment. It's a case of being at the wrong place at the wrong time. He went to a sushi restaurant offering free food to those who completed the contest (eating a lot of sushi within a minute!), not knowing that he'll have to pay for the food if he didn't finish eating the sushis.Since he didn't manage to eat all the sushis, & worse, didn't have money to pay for the food, he was force to work at restaurant, Boleh Sushi.Honda (Patrick Teoh), the restaurant owner, wanted to join a Sumo competition, but didn't have enough team members. So without telling Ramlee, he secretly enrolled Ramlee in the competition.This is when things got sticky, & funny ! When Ramlee found out about the competition, he wanted out but changed his mind when beautiful daughter, Siti (Inthira Charoenpura), who is half-Japanese and half-Malay, encouraged him to participate in the competition.The movie showed a great deal of places in Kuala Lumpur & Japan. The Sumo wrestling is also highlighted in this movie. All the ethics in the Sumo is shown. It's quite interesting as these things are little known to people living outside Japan. Ramlee & his three friends also learn a valuable lesson, which is Nokotta - fight !1 thing that could have been omitted (or at least minimised) is all those ads. Celcom (a telecommunication provider) & Osim (a massage chair company) advertise heavily in this movie, from the very beginning to the end of the movie, which made the movie lost its charm. My friends told me it is like watching an extended version of ads, & a bad sales pitch at that, too. Even if the director wanted to add ads, it must be done in a way that the ads complement the movie, & not otherwise. All in all, Afdlin Shauki proves once again that he can make a good movie, with storyline that is not too cliché, & contains a good dose of jokes, without missing on the moral values.Nokotta !

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stewgreen

Just went to see the Afdlin Shauki movie Sumo Lah. Since I saw him live at KLPac last year I thought I'd give in a chance. I was dreading it being Astro tacky, but it's not except for the last 30s of smiling together faces, and outrageous product placement for Celcom. Michihiro Kubota wrote the script and it seems he set out to make an intelligent film with important moral messages.I would really recommend it especially to take foreign visitors to, cos it's much better than Hollywood films, it shows lots of places in KL and Malaysian culture. It has places like his house in Kampung Baru that I walked past yesterday, KLPAC, Puchong, the park in Putrajaya, The Japanese club and things like roadside food-stalls.It seeks to give a moral message without being preachy. Malays taking the mickey out of themselves for being lazy and giving up too easy - Shows him learning humility and discipline by working with Japanese.So it's dialog is 60% Malay, 30% English and 10% Japanese. The way this is done with each character switching between languages while the subtitles switch between English and Malay works well; you never feel left out as if you were watching a foreign movie.Outrageous product placement and I mean outrageous, one time they actually watch a Celcom commercial, features a Celcom shop, people using Celcom 3G video phones and almost 10% of the time a Celcom banner is visible. Ogawa also sponsors and twice they go into Ogawa shop to use the chairs for free. The fitness studio also get a lot of publicity.Other Malaysian cultural things we see are motorbike repossession, and the hardworking mother paying for everything for her boy while he seems selfish and ungrateful, Japanese winding Malays up by being too direct and aggressive (what ?), him calling out at girls going past .. even Muslims. Strangely we see he touches women who are not his girlfriend e.g. Massaging their hands without asking then he squeams with embarrassment when he sees the sumo wrestlers in loincloths or sees naked men at the hot-springs. Surely every man has seen other men naked before what's the big deal, maybe to women it's interesting, but not to men.It could have done with another few weeks for character development. The stereotypical baddie repenting and becoming honorable could have been done better. And it could have shown better how they used their skills acquired in Japan to win in the sumo bouts. The womens roles were all about being pretty, whereas the men's were about being leaders, winners or baddies. It would have been nice to have had some better role models for women other that a pretty Celcom promoter or dedicated put upon mother.Nakossa- try hard, no matter the opponent

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