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  • Angkor Awakens: An Inside Look At Cambodia

Angkor Awakens: An Inside Look At Cambodia

  • 05/15/2017
  • 05/18/2017
  • Landmark Theater, E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW, Entrance on E Street between 10th & 11th Streets NW Washington D.C., 20004

***HELD OVER through May 18***

Cornellians, here’s your chance to support independent filmmaking and a fellow Cornellian at the same time!  Bob Lieberman ’62’s new documentary has been extended at the Landmark E Street Cinema in Washington DC.

Angkor Awakens: An Inside Look At Cambodia is an eye-opening snapshot of a nation poised at a political and cultural tipping point. Viewing the present through the lens of the country’s tangled history; the film follows the people of Cambodia as they fight to recover their culture and history in the wake of the Khmer Rouge genocide (1975-1979).

Location: Landmark Theater, E Street Cinema

555 11th Street NW, Entrance on E Street between 10th & 11th Streets NW, Washington D.C., 20004

Purchase tickets here: 

https://www.landmarktheatres.com/washington-d-c/e-street-cinema/film-info/angkor-awakens-an-inside-look-at-cambodia

Angkor Awakens features intimate interviews— including an unprecedented appearance by Cambodia’s Strongman/Prime Minister Hun Sen. The film examines Nixon and Kissinger’s secret bombing of Cambodia, which set the stage for the rise of the Khmer Rouge. Containing stunning footage of the country, this film provides a window into the lives of one of Asia's youngest populations as it seeks to leave behind its brutal past. Though the legacy of past violence and present-day repression lives on, the film is counterbalanced by the hopes and aspirations of Cambodia’s new generation.

Robert H. Lieberman '62, director of the film, is a best-selling novelist, award winning filmmaker (They call it Myanmar, Last Stop Kew Gardens), and a long-time member of the Cornell University Physics department. Lieberman’s background as a child of the Holocaust led him to explore the effects of the genocide on today’s young Cambodians.

Deborah Hoard '78 of the Ithaca-based studio, Photosynthesis Productions, is producer.  More than 17 Cornellians, past and present, assisted in the creation of the film with interviews, historical research, music and post-production.

Watch the latest trailer for the film here.

Contact Info: 

(607) 273-8801

RHL10@cornell.edu


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