But the kids? The kids of the 2005 generation loved it. It was their Pikachu. A Pikachu that complained about homework, that asked for indomie after a battle, that told Satoshi he was being an idiot. Risa had turned a mascot into a character. The official dub, directed by a veteran named Pak Hendra, aimed for accuracy but kept one foot in the chaos of the past. They kept "Team Kriminal Bodoh" as an homage. They made James (Kojiro) speak with a thick Medan accent, and Jessie (Musashi) with the haughty, elongated vowels of a Surabaya socialite.
The call went out. They needed voice actors. And they needed them fast. Pokemon Dubbing Indonesia
For three years, Pokémon in Indonesia went underground. Kids traded bootleg manga and whispered about the "old voices." Then, in 2005, a legitimate miracle occurred. , a new free-to-air network, purchased the official rights to dub Pokémon: Advanced Generation . But the kids
A young woman named Risa Sarasvati, a theater student who worked part-time at a radio station, auditioned. She was a die-hard fan of the old VHS dubs. She remembered Pak Bambang’s gruff Satoshi. For her audition, she read a scene where May (Haruka) first sees her Torchic. A Pikachu that complained about homework, that asked