Terang Boelan is a 1937 film from the Dutch East Indies. Written by Saeroen, directed by Albert Balink, and starring Rd Mochtar, Roekiah and Eddie T. Effendi. It follows two lovers who elope after one is almost forced to marry an opium smuggler. The film was shot in the Indies and Singapore, and was partially inspired by the 1936 Hollywood film The Jungle Princess.
About Terang Boelan in brief

The Teng Chun’s dominance was an effect of the Great Depression and changing market trends. The Great Depression had led to the Dutch government collecting higher taxes and cinemas selling tickets at lower prices, ensuring that there was a very low profit margin for local films. As a result, cinemas in the colony mainly showed Hollywood productions, while the domestic industry decayed. In an attempt to show that locally produced, well-made films could be profitable, the Dutch journalist AlbertBalink produced Pareh in 1935 in collaboration with the ethnic Chinese Wong brothers and the Dutch documentary filmmaker Mannus Franken. PareH cost 20 times as much as an average local production, in part because of Balink’s perfectionism, and ultimately a failure. By late 1936, Balink had obtained financial backing from several domestic and foreign companies, and it would be announced that ANIF announced that it would produce several feature films, on 1 January 1937.
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This page is based on the article Terang Boelan published in Wikipedia (as of Dec. 05, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






