Exclusive: Cambodia's most celebrated filmmaker Rithy Panh returns with a project about journalists who began to question the ...
Under the leadership of Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge government implemented policies—forced labor, resettlements, torture, starvation—that led to the death of 1.7-to-3 million people, or at least ...
The U.N.-backed tribunal was formed decades after the end of their reign, and several years after the death of feared Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, in 1998. Only three of the defendants below have ...
Nearly half a century after Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge regime murdered at least 2 million people in Cambodia – a quarter of the ...
"We are so lucky to visit this country at a key moment of its history" Strand Releasing has unveiled the official trailer for ...
Thayer was the only reporter to interview pol pot in two decades. He was also the only one to talk to all of the top Khmer Rouge leaders. "Nuon Chea, in my view, is more guilty of crime against ...
In 1975, soon after the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, grabbed power in Cambodia, Khieu Samphan, one of the group’s leaders who was then serving as deputy prime minister, visited China and met ...
In a new film, journalists confront a dictator. Ad Policy This photo taken on February 9, 2012, shows former Washington Post correspondent Elizabeth Becker standing next to a photo of former Khmer ...
Though best known as a documentarian, Panh’s latest work, “Meeting with Pol Pot,” is a fictionalized story that examines the Khmer Rouge from the point of view of journalists covering the war.
Cambodia’s most celebrated filmmaker Rithy Panh has devoted his career to exploring the legacy of the Khmer Rouge through cinema. The genocidal regime, led by the infamous Communist and ...