Htms-090 Sebuah Keluarga Di Kampung A- Kimika May 2026

Film historian Dr. Sarasvati Devi notes, "This is not a family drama. This is a chemical equation. The film asks: What happens to the human soul when the soil becomes toxic? The answer HTMS-090 gives is nothing. It evaporates. The static is the vapour trail." For 60 years, HTMS-090 sat in a mislabeled canister in the National Film Archive of Thailand (hence the HTMS prefix, usually reserved for naval vessels—a clerical error). It was screened only once publicly, at a 1979 film symposium, where audience members walked out, accusing it of being "broken."

For three minutes, the image dissolves into electronic interference. When it clears, the kampung is empty. The family is gone. The hut remains. On the wooden table, a single plate of untouched clams. HTMS-090 Sebuah Keluarga Di Kampung a- Kimika

Critic Faisal bin Omar argues that this is "a cinema of the waiting apocalypse." He writes, "In HTMS-090, the family is not a unit of love, but a unit of labor awaiting collapse. The kampung is not a community; it is a geography of attrition." The film’s haunting power lies in its final ten minutes. Without warning, the diegetic world breaks. The fisherman’s net pulls up nothing but black sludge. The children stop playing gasing (top spinning) and stare at a fixed point off-screen—an empty road leading out of the frame. Film historian Dr

In the vast, often inaccessible archive of mid-20th century Southeast Asian cinema, certain reels are marked not by their spectacle, but by their silence. HTMS-090, catalogued simply as Sebuah Keluarga Di Kampung A-Kimika ("A Family in Kampung A-Kimika"), is one such relic. For decades, it was dismissed as a technical test reel—grainy, black-and-white, devoid of narrative thrust. But a recent restoration by the Kimika Heritage Collective reveals a different truth: this is not a test. It is a manifesto of the mundane. Produced in 1962 (estimated), the film exists in a void. There is no director credit. No sound design beyond the ambient hum of the projector that later copied it. The "A-Kimika" of the title is a fictionalized coastal village, likely a composite of the mangrove communities of the Malacca Strait. At 48 minutes, the film follows a single day in the life of a fisherman, his wife, and their three children. The film asks: What happens to the human

Rating (Retrospective): ★★★★★ Availability: Streaming on the Kimika Heritage Vault (Restored 4K with static intact). Viewer discretion advised for those triggered by the sound of wind through bamboo.