Abang Adik (2023)

Abang Adik 2023

7.4/10
Two undocumented orphans scrounge up a life in this emotionally moving debut drama

Our take

At the fringes of society, sometimes, all you have is your family. You would do all you can to feed, clothe, and protect them, and your fate hangs in the balance of what they do in return. Abang Adik is centered on two undocumented orphans in Malaysia, and because they only have each other, Abang does all he can legally and within his capabilities as a disabled man to scrounge up some money, but Adik tries to gain more secretly, resorting to scamming fellow illegal immigrants. Writer-director Jin Ong portrays their plight realistically, but more importantly, the drama works because Ong prioritizes crafting the compelling dynamic between them, making it much more heartbreaking when the loss of their one chance changes everything. Abang Adik may not be a perfect drama, but it’s a daring debut that’s needed.

Synopsis

Abang and Adi are undocumented orphans living in present-day Malaysia. While the older brother, a deaf mute, has resigned himself to a life of poverty, his younger sibling burns with indignation. A brutal accident upsets the fragile balance of their relationship.

Storyline

Because of being undocumented orphans in Malaysia, deaf-mute Abang resigns himself to a life of poverty, though his younger brother Adik burns with indignation, refusing help and getting in trouble.

TLDR

Genuinely heartbreaking to watch.

What stands out

The performances. Wu Kang-ren and Jack Tan share a believable dynamic that works so well.