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A seller at an angkringan, preparing tempeh with wrapped nasi kucing visible in the foreground. Nasi kucing is often sold at a low price (sometimes as low as Rp 1,000 for nasi kucing [5] and Rp 4,000 for sega macan [4]) at small, road-side food stalls called angkringan, which are frequented by working-class people, or wong cilik, including pedicab and taxi drivers, students, and street ...
Writing about the film for The Jakarta Post in a mixed review, Stanley Widianto writes that the film "finds its strength as a romantic comedy by eschewing forced storytelling" that "feels less like a fictional film and more like chapters of a shared diary", praising the script for its "naturalistic and heartwarming" storytelling.