
Angkar
Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2018
June 14 - 21, 2018
Khonsaly Hay returns to his lush, serene village in Cambodia after over 40 years living in France and comes face-to-face with his former Khmer Rouge persecutors. Directed by Khonsaly’s daughter, this deeply immersive film juxtaposes past and present to tenderly reveal unreconciled traumas haunting Cambodians today.
Screening followed by discussion with filmmaker Neary Adeline Hay and John Sifton, Asia Advocacy Director, HRW
Khonsaly Hay returns to his lush, serene village in Cambodia after over 40 years living in France and comes face-to-face with his former Khmer Rouge persecutors. Pol Pot’s regime of extreme violence and torture between 1975-1979 turned neighbor against neighbor and resulted in the deaths of nearly 2 million people. Decades later, survivors find themselves living next door to the very people responsible for their suffering. In this beautifully personal and artfully crafted testimony of survival, Khonsaly travels the country, confronting his past and seeking what remains of the family and friends he was forced to leave behind. Directed by Khonsaly’s daughter, this deeply immersive film juxtaposes past and present to tenderly reveal unreconciled traumas haunting Cambodians today. U.S. Premiere
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