Showbiz
Indonesian films break all-time annual admission record with horror flicks ‘Agak Laen’, ‘Vina’, ‘Kang Mak’ pulling in audiences
Imajinari’s horror comedy ‘Agak Laen’ is Indonesias biggest film of the year, drawing 9.1 million admissions. — Image courtesy of Imajinari

JAKARTA, Oct 6 — Indonesia has broken all-time annual cinema admissions record in just nine months from January to September 2024, with new releases pulling in 61.25 million ticket sales.

The previous record was set in 2022, when local productions racked up 58.16 million admissions by the year-end then.

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Calendar year total admissions, including films released in 2023, reached 95.56 million by the end of September, with local productions currently have around a 66% market share, according to data from local box-office analyst Bicara Box Office, reported Deadline.

Imajinari’s horror comedy Agak Laen remains the biggest film of the year, drawing 9.1 million admissions, followed by horror thriller Vina: Sebelum 7 Hari with 5.8 million admissions and Falcon Pictures’ Kang Mak, a remake of Thai horror comedy blockbuster Pee Mak, with 4.8 million.

The next three films in the 2024 top ten are also local productions – infidelity drama Ipar Adalah Maut (4.7 million) and horror prequel Dancing Village: The Curse Begins (4 million), which are both produced by MD Pictures, and Joko Anwar’s horror Grave Torture, produced by Rapi Films and Legacy Pictures.

Thai blockbuster How To Make Millions Before Grandma Dies is the biggest foreign film of the year, ranking at number seven with around 3.5 million admissions, followed by two Hollywood titles – Warner Bros’ Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire and Disney’s Deadpool & Wolverine. Korean horror Exhuma rounds out the top ten.

MD Pictures’ horror film KKN Di Desa Penari remains the highest-grossing Indonesian film of all time after it pulled in more than 10 million admissions in 2022. Dancing Village: The Curse Begins, which was filmed with Imax cameras and released in North America, is a prequel to that title.

Despite the growth of streaming, Indonesian audiences have been flooding back to cinemas since the pandemic, drawn by high-quality theatres and ticket prices of around US$3 (RM12.65), which is low compared to most other markets in the region.

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