Enam Djam di Djogdja was released on May 25, 1951. Before
Enam Djam di Jogja was released in early 1951, Ismail endured a lengthy censorship process. The Indonesian censorship bureau, according to the film critic Salim Said, took issue with the depiction of Dutch soldiers; in the end, numerous scenes showing them were cut. Critical reception at the time was mixed: a review in the magazine
Aneka, for instance, found that the shots could have been better, but the performances were better than usual for domestic works. The Indonesian film archive
Sinematek Indonesia holds both a
35 mm and
VHS copy of
Enam Djam di Jogja. Allusions to the title, in other Indonesian works, were made as late as 1991. Two further films have been released detailing the General Assault of 1 March:
Abbas Wiranatakusuma's
Janur Kuning (
Yellow Coconut Leaves; 1980) and
Arifin C. Noer's
Serangan Fajar (
Dawn Attack; 1982). Unlike
Enam Djam di Jogja, these two films emphasised the role of future President
Suharto – who is not present in Ismail's version. At the time these two films were released,
Enam Djam di Jogja continued to be screened on the state television network
TVRI. Eventually
Janur Kuning was broadcast annually on the anniversary of the assault, before it and
Serangan Fajar were withdrawn from broadcast in 1998 for attempting to manipulate history and create a cult with Suharto in the centre, following
Suharto's downfall. ==Footnotes==