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Rukman Rosadi (left) and Ganindra Bimo in a still from 13 Bombs, directed by Angga Dwimas Sasongko. Rio Dewanto, Ardhito Pramono, Chicco Kurniawan and Lutesha co-star.

Review | Netflix movie review: 13 Bombs – Indonesian terrorist action thriller set in Jakarta fails to get its message across

  • Rio Dewanto stars as the leader of a gang that attacks an armoured car, killing the guards but leaving the money, while threatening Jakarta with 13 bombs
  • An anti-terrorist agent (Putri Ayudya) goes after the gang with her friend (Niken Anjani) in this action thriller that doesn’t live up to its ambitious premise
Asian cinema

2/5 stars

With news breaking that veteran Hong Kong producer Bill Kong Chi-keung (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) is shooting a new, high-octane thriller in the vein of The Raid and The Night Comes for Us, it would appear Indonesian-style action films are hotter than ever.

Writer-director Angga Dwimas Sasongko (Filosofi Kopi) looks to get in on the action with his new, politically minded terrorist thriller.

Unspooling against the backdrop of an economically unbalanced Jakarta, where fat-cat politicians manipulate monetary policy at the expense of a vast struggling underclass, 13 Bombs sees the city brought to its knees by a terrorist group’s reign of incendiary terror.

An armoured car is targeted in broad daylight, but the heavily armed attackers leave its payload of banknotes untouched, while killing mercilessly those who were guarding it.

Via video link, the gang’s Robin Hood-style leader, Arok (Rio Dewanto), demands a hefty ransom – to be paid in Bitcoin via a newly launched cryptocurrency platform – or they will trigger a baker’s dozen of explosive devices they have hidden around the city.

Rio Dewanto as Atok in a still from 13 Bombs.

Receiving the demands, the Counter-Terrorism Unit immediately detains the two young tech bros who created the platform, but they appear to be mere pawns in an elaborate scheme, staged not to make money but to avenge an exploited underclass and redress the country’s economic imbalance.

It’s a ridiculously ambitious premise, and Sasongko’s intentions of staging a high- octane urban terrorist drama that addresses pressing social injustices quickly buckles under the weight of its lofty themes.

Foremost among the film’s missteps is to invest too much screen time in the plight of digital entrepreneurs William (Ardhito Pramono) and Oscar (Chicco Kurniawan), the young men responsible for creating the crypto platform, Indodax.

Chicco Kurniawan as Oscar (left) and Ardhito Pramono as William in a still from 13 Bombs.

Their youthful, everyman status is clearly positioned as an attractive entry point for audiences, but they remain unsympathetic and largely ineffectual throughout, apart from some convenient, last-minute hacking skills.

The female characters are more interesting. Dedicated CTU agent Karin (Putri Ayudya) breaks protocol and goes after the bad guys single-handed, after being sidelined by her demanding superior (Rukman Rosadi).

Eventually she allies with Agnes (Lutesha), a feisty and infinitely more adept friend to the Indodax boys. Karin also calls upon colleague Gita (Niken Anjani) to get her hands dirty, and the film is always more compelling when they are on screen.

Putri Ayudya as CTU agent Karin (right) in a still from 13 Bombs.

Ultimately, 13 Bombs finds itself torn between the desire to champion the common man and its obligation to ensure justice is served. Despite a few interspersed set pieces, the film fails to find its spark.

13 Bombs is streaming on Netflix.

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