Tenggelamnya Kapal Van Der Wijck Movie May 2026

The primary obstacle to Zainuddin and Hayati’s love is not personal animosity but the inflexible caste system of Minangkabau matrilineal society. Zainuddin is an orphan without a suku (clan); in adat terms, he is an outsider, a "nobody." The film visually emphasizes this through mise-en-scène: Hayati’s family home is large, ornate, and elevated, while Zainuddin’s living quarters are sparse and low to the ground. When Datuk Meringgih states, "Adat cannot be broken," the film critiques how tradition, rather than protecting community, becomes a tool for exclusion and emotional violence.

[Insert Course Name, e.g., Southeast Asian Cinema & Literature] Date: [Insert Date] tenggelamnya kapal van der wijck movie

Tenggelamnya Kapal Van Der Wijck (The Sinking of the Van Der Wijck), originally a 1938 novel by Hamka (Haji Abdul Malik Karim Amrullah), was adapted into a feature film in 2013 by Sunil Soraya. The narrative, set in the Dutch East Indies (modern-day Indonesia) in the early 20th century, transcends its romantic plot to serve as a critique of Minangkabau adat (customary law) and colonial social hierarchy. This paper argues that the film uses the central tragedy—the sinking of the ship—not merely as a dramatic climax, but as a metaphorical deus ex machina that forcibly dismantles the artificial social boundaries erected by both tradition and colonial modernity. The primary obstacle to Zainuddin and Hayati’s love