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Three Days (Korean: 쓰리 데이즈; RR: Sseuri Deijeu) is a 2014 South Korean action-thriller television series starring Park Yoo-chun, Son Hyun-joo, Park Ha-sun, Yoon Je-moon, So Yi-hyun, Jang Hyun-sung and Choi Won-young.
This is a list of films banned in Malaysia, as they are viewed by the Malaysian government for violating relevant laws and regulations, or because of other political and religious factors. Films that are assigned the Tidak Diluluskan Untuk Tayangan ("Not Passed for Screening") [ 1 ] category by the Film Censorship Board of Malaysia are banned ...
This is an index for the list of films produced in Malaysia ordered by decade on separate pages. For an alphabetical listing of Malaysian films see Category:Malaysian films . Before 1960
The top film of the year in Malaysia was Iron Man 3, grossing RM45,268,519. It had officially become the first film ever to gross over RM40 million. [39] This was followed by Fast & Furious 6 which grossed a total of RM31,462,780. On 26 April, Iron Man 3 broke the highest opening day record previously held by The Avengers.
Siasatan. - crime documentary series focused on high-profiled crime cases reported in Malaysia; aired in 2010 Majalah 3 - a flagship magazine program aired since 1987 Nona - a women's magazine program aired since 1985.
Dogengers (Malay Dub) (3 April) (evening & morning animation) – The edutainment series is sponsored by Ohga Pharmacy Japan, whose mascot "Ohgaman" is one of the series' main characters, through subsidiary Ohgaman Malaysia. [4] [5] It is originally aired in Japan to raise awareness about medicine wastage. [6] [7]
The film ran its official photography for 81 days starting February to May 2023, right after the release of Polis Evo 3 including in Bandar Malaysia and the Klang Valley, including Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. The film received huge positive reviews from critics and filmmaker for its direction, writing, casting, camera movement and plot twist.
The cinema of Malaysia consists of feature films produced in Malaysia, shot in the languages Malay, Mandarin, Cantonese, Tamil, various indigenous languages, and English. Malaysia produces about 60 feature films and 300–400 television dramas and serials per year, in addition to the in-house productions of individual television stations.