Harry Potter Dub Indonesia- Page

Not loudly. Not dramatically. But with a trembling jaw that slowly steadied. “Aku tidak akan mundur.”

Bu Dewi pressed the intercom button. “That’s it. That’s Harry. Keep that.” Rendi had grown up on the original English Harry Potter films, watching pirated copies on his cousin’s laptop in Bandung. He never imagined he’d become Harry for millions of Indonesian kids. But now, inside Studio 7 at Suara Nusantara Post, he was recording the famous “Expecto Patronum!” scene for Prisoner of Azkaban .

“Expecto Patronum.”

But Rendi stayed still for a moment. He had just spoken the last line of Deathly Hallows : “Kausangka aku tak tahu caranya? Aku sudah cukup umur, tentu saja aku tahu caranya.” (You think I don’t know how? I’m of age, of course I know how.)

He smiled. For seven films, he had been the bridge between a British orphan and a hundred million Indonesian children who couldn’t speak English. He had taught them that bravery sounds the same in any language. Harry Potter Dub Indonesia-

The challenge was the spell.

Rendi nodded. He thought of his own father, who worked twelve-hour shifts at a textile factory and never understood why Rendi wanted to “talk into microphones.” He thought of the first time he heard his own voice come out of a cartoon cat on a Sunday morning—and how his mother had cried. Not loudly

He leaned into the mic.

In a cramped Jakarta recording studio, a young voice actor finds his own courage while dubbing the Quidditch World Cup for Indonesian audiences—only to realize that the boy who lived lives inside all of us. Rendi had been dubbing foreign cartoons since he was twelve, but nothing prepared him for Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire . “Aku tidak akan mundur

Here’s a short draft story based on the idea of Harry Potter dubbed into Indonesian (often called Harry Potter versi Bahasa Indonesia by fans). The Voice of the Seeker

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