![]() ![]() This might cursorily explain why Bujang Lapok contains the very brief and rather inconsequential on-location scene at Orchard Road. Around the time of its completion, The Straits Times had also reported Run Run Shaw’s forecast for that part of Orchard Road to be transformed into one of the city’s leading business areas, after announcing their own plans for the neighbouring site at the junction of Orchard Road and Scotts Road. After much delay, the construction of the ten-storey Ngee Ann Building, designed by local architect Ng Keng Siang (of Asia Insurance Building fame), finally commenced in August 1955, and was completed by mid-1957. The remains were reinterred at a Chinese cemetery at the 12 th mile, Seletar. Mass exhumation of the graves, numbering nearly 20,000, began in September 1951. ![]() The proposal for the new residential development was in view of Orchard Road fast becoming a shopping district, and the continued existence of the disused burial site was thus found wanting. The Ngee Ann Building along Orchard was a 3-million dollar housing project built over the old Tai San (Tai Sun 泰山亭) Teochew Chinese cemetery owned by Ngee An Kongsi, which was (and still is) one of the largest Teochew clan associations in Singapore, founded by Seah Eu Chin in 1845. Ramli then crosses the road and gets “teleported”, through the magic of film editing, to Robinson Road. The two of them engage in some small talk, and go on their separate ways. Ramlee’s character Ramli meets a friend traveling on a trishaw. Towards the film’s end, Orchard Road’s Ngee Ann Building appears briefly where P. We reckon that no less than ten Malay Film Productions movies had used MacRitchie Reservoir as a backdrop in scenes associated with dating, fighting (especially at night), loneliness or despair. And it was also extremely popular with filmmakers from the Shaw Brothers’ studios for outdoor shoots, probably since Jalan Ampas was merely a stone’s throw away. It was then a favoured dating spot with lovers. Ramlee-composed song, ‘Resam Dunia’, exploits the serene settings of the popular MacRitchie Reservoir. Read more about Kampong Tanjong Kling in our location review of Kembali Saorang.įurther into the film, another P. (The song was actually performed by popular singer Nona Asiah.) The coastal kampong was also the setting for a song in the movie, titled ‘Kampong Nelayan’ (Fishing Village), and “lip-synced” by Zaiton’s character when she is inspired by the rural way of life in the fishing village and her love for one of the bachelors. Though most of the scenes of the bachelors’ boarding house in the fictional kampong were filmed in the studio, outdoor panning shots of various parts of (what was presumably) Kampong Tanjong Kling were used as establishing shots at various junctures in the film. We figured that the coastal kampong featured in this film might be Kampong Tanjong Kling at Jurong, after comparisons with similar kampong scenes in two other Shaw Brothers Malay movies made in the same year – Kembali Saorang and Taufan. ![]() ![]() The Nanyang Siang Pau building was located opposite the Shaw’s Chambers, then headquarters of the Shaw Organization, which was where the bachelors will leave from after a harsh day at work in the city, back to the comfort of their kampong on the outskirts. The film begins distinctly ‘on-location’ in downtown Singapore with a pan-and-tilt shot across Robinson Road and up the façade of the Nanyang Siang Pau 南洋商报 building (the brand-new seven-storey headquarters of the established Chinese press founded by Tan Kah Kee it opened in January 1957 and was later renamed the ‘Afro-Asia Building’). Ramlee and based on a story written by Chua Boon Hean 蔡文玄 – long-time manager of Shaw Organization’s Chinese Department and father of Chua Lam 蔡澜 the famous food critic and author – this Malay-language movie is a light–hearted comedy sprinkled with gentle humour and keen reflections on the modernizing (and represented as somewhat perverting) way of life among Malays in contemporary Singapore and newly-independent Malaya. Robinson Road, between Shaw’s Chamber & Nanyang Siang Pau BuildingīUJANG LAPOK IS A DECEPTIVELY SIMPLE FILM that revolves around three over-aged bachelors who live in a boarding house and begin to fall in love with the ladies in their kampong neighbourhood. Produced by Malay Film Productions (Shaw Bros.) Shamsuddin, Aziz Sattar, Zaiton, Normadiah, Dayang Sofia Original film title in Malay: Bujang Lapok ![]()
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