'People are still saying they were not aware of the Nazi camps. So it is very important to show people what happened,' says Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh.
"[Cinema] is a way for me to remind people that we must take care of ourselves," says Rithy Panh.
Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh has never hidden from the horrors of his past. His escape from the brutal reign of the Khmer Rouge and the killing fields of the 1970s that took at least 2 million lives has been explored meticulously across his 30-year career., Panh, now 55, has tried to piece together memories that are often patchy, even shattered by the brutal nature of what he saw and heard, and the director readily admits to using the process as part of a continual search for closure.
What about the style you chose? For most of the film, the images are presented in triptychs, and it almost becomes like an installation piece.
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