Soekarno Film 2013 Apr 2026
★★★½ (3.5/5) Recommended for: Students of Southeast Asian history, lovers of political oratory, and those who believe that a single man’s voice can indeed change the world.
The film is flawed. It is too long, occasionally melodramatic, and historically incomplete. Non-Indonesian audiences may struggle with the dense socio-political jargon. Yet, as a piece of national myth-making, it is a masterpiece of intention . It successfully captures the feeling of merdeka (freedom)—the dizzying, terrifying, euphoric moment when a colonized people decide to become a nation. soekarno film 2013
Soekarno (2013) is not a history lesson. It is a ritual. It is a film designed to remind a young generation of Indonesians, who did not hear his voice crackling over the radio, what it meant to stand in the shadow of a giant who dared to dream an archipelago into a country. ★★★½ (3
However, the film’s greatest weakness is its compression of time. To fit a decade of revolution into two and a half hours, history becomes a montage. The bloody battle of Surabaya (later depicted in a different film, Battle of Surabaya ) is reduced to a single heroic tableau. The complex negotiations with the Japanese are simplified into a matter of personal charisma. To write deeply about Soekarno (2013) is to acknowledge its silence. This is a film produced under the watchful eye of a post-Suharto Indonesia that is still sensitive about the 1965 coup and the subsequent mass killings. The film ends triumphantly with the Proclamation. It does not show the later years: the Guided Democracy, the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly, the Nasakom contradictions, or the slide into authoritarianism. Soekarno (2013) is not a history lesson
