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81 of 82 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful, but don't expect a good night's sleep afterwards, December 25, 2000
I saw this 1984 film when it first came out, but after reading "River of Time" by the British journalist, Jon Swain, I knew I had to see it again. This time, it had an even stronger impact on me. The screenplay is based on the true story written by Sydney Schanberg, a New York Times reporter in Cambodia who had to leave his Cambodian friend and colleague Dith Pran behind when the Khmur Rogue took over the country in 1975. Dith Pran is forced into a worker's camp, where he endures unspeakable agonies until he finally escapes.The movie won three well-deserved academy awards. One was best for cinematography. I can understand why. Even though the movie was shot in Thailand, the feeling of Indo-China and the area along the Mekong display its great beauty as well as the countryside. Jon Swain describes this in his book, but there is nothing like seeing it on the screen. And then there are the killing fields themselves, with bones and rotting corpses that Dith Pran discovers. Anyone who has ever seen this film will never forget this scene. The second award was for film editing. That was a job of real artistry. It is always a choice of what tiny segments of a scene to emphasize and the editors got it exactly right. There was the terrified child holding her hands over her ears to shut out the bombing sounds. There was the tiny vegetable that Dith Pran plucks off a plant with relish when he is in the prison camp. There is the wash of blood on the floor in the hospital where people were dying. Dr. Hang S. Ngor won an Oscar for his role of Dith Pran, one of the few non-professional actors to ever win an Oscar. He was especially suited to the part because he, himself, had endured 4 years of torture and imprisonment in a Cambodian work camp. He had to hide his identity of physician and watch his young wife die in childbirth while there. No wonder he was able to play the part so well. I understand he was murdered in his garage in his home in Los Angeles in 1996 during a robbery in which he tried to protect a memento from his wife. The entire cast was wonderful, each acting performance outstanding. Sam Waterson played Sydney Schanberg with passion and realism. John Malkovich played his photographer sidekick. And Julian Sands had a small role as journalist Jon Swain who was one of the three westerners saved from execution by the intervention of Dith Pran and whose tried unsuccessfully to forge a passport to help Dith Pran escape. Even though the movie was 141 minutes long, I was totally absorbed with the same kind of horrific fascination I felt while reading Jon Swain's book. It's hard to believe that such horrors go on in the world while we sit here in our comfortable lives. This movie shocks us into reality. And makes us appreciate our blessings. It also reminded me of the role of the journalist to go out on the front lines and risk their lives for their stories. They are to be applauded as being the witnesses to their times. Highly recommended. But don't expect a good night's sleep afterwards.
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