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Paul Freedman Movies

2011  
 
A group of Ugandan teens including former child soldiers and escaped sex slaves of the Lord's Resistance Army are given the opportunity to dramatize their traumatic experiences under the tyrannical rule of Joseph Kony and his henchmen in this documentary from filmmaker Bill Yoelin. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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2007  
 
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Peabody Award-winning filmmaker Paul Freedman directs this sobering documentary about the genocidal crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan. Freedman followed a group of African Union peacekeeping forces on a journey through the area, observing the 2.5 million people displaced from their homes by brutal violence, and forced to stay in the squalor of temporary camps. Analyzing the cultural, political, and historical background of the area, the film examines how the government in Sudan was able to turn so ruthlessly against its own indigenous people, creating what would most likely go down in history as one of humanity's most shameful moments. ~ Cammila Collar, Rovi

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2004  
 
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A decade after 800,000 Rwandans were subject to a brutal genocide that wiped out approximately 75% of the ethnic Tutsi minority over the course of just three months, government officials and international politicians speak to the survivors who witness the atrocities firsthand and offer a look at the war-ravaged nation as it appears ten years after the fact. It was an unspeakable tragedy, and one that may have been largely preventable had the true horrors of the events that were unfolding been accurately reported in the world media. Thanks to a viciously effective propaganda campaign, however, the carnage continued unabated while the outside world remained blissfully unaware. Perhaps the most shocking aspect of the genocide is the fact that it could have never succeeded without the participation of ordinary citizens, many of whom played a pivotal role in keeping the propaganda machine running efficiently. Now, as a nation attempts to strike the delicate balance of reconciliation and justice, politicians speak out on how they are attempting to help the healing process while reflecting on the reasons the tragedy occurred in the first place. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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