Director-writer Angga Dwimas Sasongko and lead actors Laura Basuki and Reza Rahadian talk about the daunting task of bringing Ika Natassa’s polarizing novel to the big screen.
ome might say that novelist Ika Natassa’s Heartbreak Motel is her most polarizing outing yet, perhaps even her most devoted fans.
Bibliophiles have been vocal in their reviews of the 2022 novel on the literary cataloging platform Goodreads, where 307 members had given Heartbreak Motel only three stars or less at the time of writing.
Many of them took particular issue with the novel's narrative style and characterization of its heroine Ava Alessandra, an acclaimed actor who is secretly dealing with a troubled past and emotionally wrought relationships.
Still, true to Angga Dwimas Sasongko's disposition as a filmmaker over the years, the polarizing reception of Heartbreak Motel did not deter him from adapting the novel into a cinematic experience. As he said candidly on July 18, "I don't care."
Turns out, anything polarizing is exactly Angga's cup of tea.
"Well, most of my films were polarizing," he continued, with a chuckle. "And it's OK. There is a risk in a polarizing body of work, and I like that."
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