Eight years after “Munyurangabo”, Lee Isaac Chung and his frequent collaborator, Samuel Gray Anderson, return to Rwanda to co-direct a documentary on 39-year-old Jean Kwezi, who was separated from his family during the 1994 genocide, only reuniting with them many years later, long after they presumed him dead.
“I Have Seen My Last Born” is screening at Hong Kong Arts Centre, as part of Cries and Whispers: Film Retrospective of Lee Isaac Chung
The documentary is split into two parts, with the first one dealing with his life, working for Chung’s Rwandan outpost for his U.S.-based production company, Almond Tree Films, with his daughter, who has grown up apart from him and now learns to live with him, while the second deals with an extended visit to his mother’s home. Through extended interviews with the protagonist and of his daughter’s footage, mostly in school, we learn...
“I Have Seen My Last Born” is screening at Hong Kong Arts Centre, as part of Cries and Whispers: Film Retrospective of Lee Isaac Chung
The documentary is split into two parts, with the first one dealing with his life, working for Chung’s Rwandan outpost for his U.S.-based production company, Almond Tree Films, with his daughter, who has grown up apart from him and now learns to live with him, while the second deals with an extended visit to his mother’s home. Through extended interviews with the protagonist and of his daughter’s footage, mostly in school, we learn...
- 7/19/2022
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
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