By The Malketeer
Netflix Malaysia has done it again!
Taking a global pop culture phenomenon and spinning it into something unmistakably, mischievously local.
A deliciously cheeky reimagining of the Addams Family that swaps Transylvanian gloom for Malaysian charm, without losing an ounce of gothic swagger.
A Gothic Family, Reborn in the Tropics
In this short film, the brooding elegance of Morticia and Gomez finds a new home in Mak Tisha and Tok Gomeh.
Played with sly chemistry by horror queen Maya Karin and actor Adi Afendi, the couple smoulder their way across a living room dance floor.
It’s proof that passion can be just as bewitching under a ceiling fan as in a candlelit manor.
The rest of the “Adam’s Family” ensemble is equally inspired.
Internet personality Bento, decked out in Pugsley’s signature stripes, teams up with his real-life grandmother as Grandmama, who swaps potion brewing for fireworks-making in a delightfully kampung-meets-creepy moment.
Then there’s Rabu — Wednesday’s local alter ego — brought to life by Puteri Balqis, pigtails intact, who lovingly tends to her “Rabubu” doll collection in a way that feels charmingly Malaysian.
Netflix’s 360° Fan Service
The film isn’t just a cute one-off.
It’s the cherry on top of Netflix Malaysia’s recent “Nevermore Academy: Malaysia campus” activation at Sunway Pyramid.
The event didn’t just offer photo ops — it dropped fans straight into the Addams-verse via themed rooms, cryptic challenges, and an “Outcasts versus Normies” orientation that blurred the line between fandom and live theatre.
Then came the pièce de résistance: Thing.
Not on your TV, but on your street.
The severed hand was spotted roaming the Klang Valley in an on-ground activation that was part horror prop, part urban Easter egg hunt.
It’s the sort of layered, physical-meets-digital stunt that keeps Netflix’s fan engagement unpredictable and irresistibly shareable.

Localisation Without Dilution
This campaign nails what so many global brands still struggle with — true localisation.
Instead of simply translating dialogue or slotting in token Malaysian references, Netflix rebuilt the narrative DNA so the cultural cues feel native.
Netflix Malaysia’s “Adam’s Family” is more than a fun content drop — it’s a case study in how to remix global IP without losing its core fanbase or alienating local audiences.
The trick lies in balancing the recognisable with the relatable: keep the archetypes, but re-skin the details so they feel lived-in rather than pasted-on.
In an age where audiences can smell a lazy localisation a mile away, this is proof that playful authenticity wins every time.
Perhaps the ultimate brand lesson is this: when you can make Rabu and Rabubu feel just as iconic as Wednesday and Thing, you’ve not only localised a franchise — you’ve made it your own.
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