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      The Missing Picture

      Released Mar 19, 2014 1 hr. 35 min. Documentary List
      99% 90 Reviews Tomatometer 76% 5,000+ Ratings Audience Score Filmmaker Rithy Panh re-creates atrocities of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979. Read More Read Less Watch on Fandango at Home Premiered Nov 29 Buy Now

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      The Missing Picture

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      The Missing Picture

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      Critics Consensus

      Thrillingly unorthodox and emotionally searing without being didactic, The Missing Picture is a uniquely poignant documentary -- and so much more.

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      Audience Reviews

      View All (56) audience reviews
      Audience Member For a movie that makes an attempt to talk about such things that are unthinkable an unspeakable, for a movie that seems to have a goal much more important than to entertain or even to educate, this piece of media remains throughout surprisingly calm, dispassionate and peaceful. In silence and it the soft voice of the narrator it finds its serenity. But what it dims down with its audio, it lightens with its striking, very strongly pronounced visuals. It is a kind of storytelling that, while admittedly experimental, instantly captures the attention of the viewer and is universally comprehensible. The viewer is transported in time and space, but most importantly the experience transports himself into more meditative state. It is terrible how much harm we can cause to each other. Let us hope that all that pain and suffering will one day come to an end, just like the experience of watching "The Missing Picture". Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/23/23 Full Review Audience Member Wow! What a stunning film Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/22/23 Full Review Audience Member I knew Holocaust survivors growing up. There was my cousin Leon, who was my family's sole survivor, and there were my grandparents' friends and some of my friends' parents who ultimately made their way to Canada from the "old country" in the 1950s. These people never talked to me about their experiences in such hell holes as Auschwitz, Buchenwald and Bergen-Belsen for it was just too painful for them. I remember seeing a number tattoo on the arm of one of my grandmother's friends. When I asked her about it, she told me that it was her phone number back in Poland. She said that she had it tattooed on her arm so that she wouldn't forget it. I was only eight years old at the time so what did I know? I believed her. I first visited Cambodia in 1991, just before the UN arrived to screw up the place. My knowledge of that country's recent tragic past came from the movie, THE KILLING FIELDS, which I saw seven years before. Until I got there, I didn't appreciate that it was only 14 years since the Cambodians had emerged from their own hell hole, called Democratic Kampuchea, which was run by the tyrant Pol Pot and enforced by the brutal Khmer Rouge. (Why are countries that have the word "democratic" in their name anything but that?) There was a strange mixture of melancholy, optimism and desperation all around. Unlike my childhood experience, the Cambodians all shared their testimonies with me - and everyone had one. Each night I went back to my hotel room to reflect on what I had heard during the day and to cry. Maybe that's why my cousin and my grandparents' friends never wanted to tell me what had happened to them. When the Khmer Rouge entered Phnom Penh on April 17, 1975, filmmaker Rithy Panh was just one day short of celebrating his 11th birthday. Like all the citizens of Cambodia's capital city, Panh and his family were marched out of their home at gunpoint with just a suitcase or whatever they could carry on their backs. They were sent to a labour camp in the countryside where all their possessions were stripped from them. Their clothes were even died black because coloured clothing was considered to be impure and corrupt. This was "Year Zero" and the start of four years of indoctrination, hardship, torture, political execution, disease and starvation that resulted in the deaths of an estimated 2 million people - almost one-third of the country's population. THE MISSING PICTURE is based on Panh's memories from that harsh and violent time. Mixing archival footage (propaganda film shot by the Khmer Rouge) with hundreds of hand-carved, hand-painted clay figurines, Panh presents us with a slightly detached yet hauntingly moving account of his own testimony. Rather than using stop-motion animation, the director places these figurines into elaborately detailed dioramas, which his camera zooms in on and pans over as the narrator recounts Panh's memories. (I watched the English version, which was beautifully narrated by French-Cambodian actor Jean-Baptiste Phou. The French version is narrated by French-Cambodian actor Randal Douc.) No pictures exist that show the dehumanization of his family or his society. (Hence, the film's title.) As the narrator says, "A picture can be stolen; a thought cannot." This is very powerful indeed. But THE MISSING PICTURE is not only a story of a dark time in recent history. It also offers us lessons for today when groups like the Islamic State, Boko Haram, the Taliban and Hamas are growing in strength. If we don't stand up to tyranny, totalitarianism and intolerance today, we'll have a world that looks a lot like North Korea tomorrow. THE MISSING PICTURE won the Cannes Film Festival's prestigious Un Certain Regard award in 2013 and received Cambodia's first-ever nomination for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar (R) in 2014. (It lost out to THE GREAT BEAUTY from Italy.) Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Audience Member http://filmreviewsnsuch.blogspot.com/2015/07/the-missing-picture.html Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Audience Member Rithy Panh uses archive footage, claymation, dioramas and a sublime sound design to make a devastating account of the nightmare that was his life as a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge regime, in order to recreate and expose that tragic missing piece in the history of his country. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/14/23 Full Review Audience Member Gripping documentary of the survivor of a grim real-life genocide. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/17/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      96% 76% Hitchcock/Truffaut TRAILER for Hitchcock/Truffaut 100% 56% Golden Slumbers 57% 60% Godard Cinema TRAILER for Godard Cinema 100% 85% Enemies of the People 96% 73% Cave of Forgotten Dreams Discover more movies and TV shows. View More

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      Critics Reviews

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      Michael Sragow Orange County Register Panh fulfills his debts to the dead not just by adding to the visual record of genocide, but also by creating a transcendent work of art. Rated: A+ Jan 5, 2015 Full Review David Stratton At the Movies (Australia) These battered, scratched pieces of film are eloquent testimony for the terrible offences that happened. Rated: 4/5 Jan 5, 2015 Full Review Jonathan Romney Film Comment Magazine Rithy Panh's cinema is an exemplary case of the imperative to bear witness. Apr 15, 2014 Full Review Dennis Harvey 48 Hills Its often personal, painful recollections are illustrated in part by elaborate clay-figure dioramas of prison camp life, to an impact not unlike Art Spiegelman’s Maus. Sep 23, 2022 Full Review Glenn Dunks Glenn Dunks ...somehow turns clay into an emotionally captivating storytelling device that, when combined with the emotive French-language narration of Randal Douc and hypnotic musical score of Marc Marder, makes for a truly astounding work of cinema. Rated: A+ May 2, 2021 Full Review Richard Bernstein The New York Review of Books To make up for the pictures we don't have, Panh uses small clay figurines, hundreds of them, painted, clothed, with individual expressions on their faces, and placed in meticulously detailed dioramas that he seems to have reconstructed from memories... Mar 13, 2019 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Filmmaker Rithy Panh re-creates atrocities of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979.
      Director
      Rithy Panh
      Screenwriter
      Rithy Panh, Christophe Bataille
      Distributor
      Strand Releasing
      Production Co
      CDP, Bophana Production, Arte France
      Genre
      Documentary
      Original Language
      French (France)
      Release Date (Theaters)
      Mar 19, 2014, Limited
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Sep 9, 2014
      Box Office (Gross USA)
      $51.6K
      Aspect Ratio
      16/9 (1.77:1)
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