Film | Negeri 5 Menara

– Inspiring, warm, and emotionally resonant, despite its flaws.

The film beautifully showcases the pondok pesantren (Islamic boarding school) culture—not as a place of rigid dogma, but as a vibrant, disciplined, and intellectually stimulating environment. The ngaji (Quran recitation), santri traditions, and the iconic five-domed mosque are captured with genuine respect and warmth. Film Negeri 5 Menara

The final act, where the friends part ways to pursue their dreams (from becoming a pilot to a journalist), is genuinely moving. The graduation scene and the flash-forward to their adult lives provide a satisfying, tear-jerking conclusion. Where It Falls Short 1. Pacing Issues The first 30 minutes feel slow, with heavy narration from the protagonist Alif (played by Maudy Ayunda’s voiceover). Some montages of daily pesantren life, while authentic, drag on and could have been trimmed. – Inspiring, warm, and emotionally resonant, despite its

Like many Indonesian dramas, it occasionally leans too heavily into tearful monologues and slow-motion realizations. The villainous senior santri is also a bit one-dimensional—constantly bullying without much depth. The final act, where the friends part ways

Here’s a balanced review of the Indonesian film Negeri 5 Menara (2012), directed by Affandi Abdul Rachman, based on the best-selling novel by Ahmad Fuadi. Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5)