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S21, la machine de mort khmère rouge

  • 2003
  • Unrated
  • 1 घं 41 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
7.2/10
1.2 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
S21, la machine de mort khmère rouge (2003)
DocumentaryHistoryWar

अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA unique documentary on the notorious S-21 prison, today the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, with testimony by the only surviving prisoners and former Khmer Rouge guards.A unique documentary on the notorious S-21 prison, today the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, with testimony by the only surviving prisoners and former Khmer Rouge guards.A unique documentary on the notorious S-21 prison, today the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, with testimony by the only surviving prisoners and former Khmer Rouge guards.

  • निर्देशक
    • Rithy Panh
  • लेखक
    • Rithy Panh
  • स्टार
    • Khieu 'Poev' Ches
    • Yeay Cheu
    • Nhem En
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    7.2/10
    1.2 हज़ार
    आपकी रेटिंग
    • निर्देशक
      • Rithy Panh
    • लेखक
      • Rithy Panh
    • स्टार
      • Khieu 'Poev' Ches
      • Yeay Cheu
      • Nhem En
    • 14यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 28आलोचक समीक्षाएं
    • 75मेटास्कोर
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
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    • पुरस्कार
      • 13 जीत और कुल 4 नामांकन

    फ़ोटो9

    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    + 4
    पोस्टर देखें

    टॉप कलाकार15

    बदलाव करें
    Khieu 'Poev' Ches
    • Self - Guard
    Yeay Cheu
    • Self - Him Houy's Mother
    Nhem En
    • Self - Photographer
    • (as Nhiem Ein)
    Houy Him
    • Self - Security deputy
    Ta Him
    • Self - Him Houy's Father
    Nhieb Ho
    • Self - Guard
    Prakk Kahn
    • Self - the Torturer
    Peng Kry
    • Self - Driver
    Som Meth
    • Self - Guard
    Chum Mey
    • Self - Survivor
    Vann Nath
    Vann Nath
    • Self - Survivor
    Top Pheap
    • Self - Interrogator & Typist
    Tcheam Seur
    • Self - Guard
    Sours Thi
    • Self - Head of Registers
    Mak Thim
    • Self - S21 Doctor
    • निर्देशक
      • Rithy Panh
    • लेखक
      • Rithy Panh
    • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
    • IMDbPro में प्रोडक्शन, बॉक्स ऑफिस और बहुत कुछ

    उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं14

    7.21.2K
    1
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    10

    फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

    9cobram-1

    The Banality of Evil.

    I have read the other comments on here and think that many people missed the point. This documentary illustrated the banality of evil very powerfully; it did not preach or try to shove the makers' opinion down the viewers' throat, like SO many other so-called documentaries do. This is not one of those "documentaries" which show edited footage and historical footage as a mere backdrop to put forth someone's opinion. That's what made it so powerful, to see the people who committed this incomprehensible evil and those that suffered it asking their own questions, trying to make sense of it all, trying to justify it, analyzing their roles in real time as the cameras roll. It was very evident that this was the first time many of them had questioned themselves on what they had done. The repetitive re-enactment and explanation of the guard's day to day activities were horrific in their normality. Even after all these years, after all that's happened, these men had no qualms about showing the world their routines, making it obvious that they don't equate their actions directly to the effects it had on their fellow country men and women. One has to remember that the guards were brain washed and indoctrinated by the communists at a very young age. This can be directly equated with what's happening in the world today with militant Islam. They're creating their own amoral killers and fanatics by indoctrinating and brain washing children. If nothing else, this documentary shows how once indoctrinated at a young age with fanatical ideology, all that remains for the rest of that persons life is an empty shell incapable of comprehending basic humanity.
    10lreynaert

    Organized terror

    In this emotional and gripping movie Rithy Panh confronts former killers and the few survivors (among the thousands of inmates) of the slaughtering in the horrible S-21 prison in Phnom Penh during the Red Khmer regime in Kampuchea. The guards show the place were people were clubbed to death, not shot. The sound of gun shots would have created panic among the group of prisoners waiting to be killed. The inmates confess blatantly that under untenable torture they told their interrogators everything those wanted to hear and denounced as traitors even the most innocent of their compatriots. The movie creates a nearly unbearable emotional climate by showing the extreme excesses of a Marxist ideology going mad, killing even intentionally children and babies. A one party State was installed where the top forced a terror regime on the entire population.

    This movie is a must see for all those interested in the history and the nature of mankind.
    gb_mpls

    Very Insightful Documentary

    Before my recent visit to Cambodia which included a short tour of S21, I did some reading on the prison and the complex events that led to its development and operation during the Democratic Kampuchea (Pol Pot) regime.

    This movie did a remarkable job filling in my sense of S21 that was not otherwise possible to experience through reading or even touring the prison. For example, interviews with two of the only seven survivors out of over 14,000 prisoners detained and killed at S21 was remarkable by itself as was the opening sequence of a former guard discussing the morality of his role with parents who no doubt felt the full brunt of the Khmer Rouge's brutality, yet survived.

    Seeing details such as the private cells, photography apparatus, the typewriters that clacked away to record prisoners' tortured confessions, and the former guards' convincing reenactment of their job as teenage guards at this grisly place was at the same time deeply disturbing and satisfying in improving my understanding of this total institution. The very instruments of dehumanization - ammunition buckets used for toilets, the bare tile floors prisoners were shackled to between interrogations and torture, the windows open to mosquitoes and vermin allowed to feast on the prisoners - are both stark and subtle in their presentation.

    Those who expect anything more than a rudimentary understanding of this infamous killing machine may be disappointed. Seeing this movie was at least as valuable as seeing the prison in person. I especially recommend it for anyone who has visited S21 or expects to visit Cambodia.
    9Chris_Docker

    lancing the boil

    A few years ago, I find myself travelling through South-East Asia, at one point trying to piece together a baffling series of events that resulted in the genocide of a third of Kampuchea, or Cambodia as we now call it.

    I read as much as I can, and try to speak to survivors. But the eyes of family members well up with tears. The inexpressible grief is barely contained. Out of respect, I desist.

    Some time later, I see this film by internationally acclaimed human rights director, Rithy Panh. He has a better reason for asking – he survived the massacre. His work, unlike my simple desire for knowledge, would provide momentum for confessions and now a war crimes tribunal. At the 'Killing Fields' outside Phnom Penh is a tree against which children had their brains bashed out. In the film, a guard explains how parents would be separated from each other, and from their children, to minimise fuss. The adults were told not to worry: they were going to a new home. They were then blindfolded for 'security reasons' and, ammunition being scarce, hit on the back of the neck with metal bars before being cast into a pit.

    Executions followed three levels of torture at S.21, a school building in Phnom Penh converted into a concentration camp (and now a memorial visitors centre). Details are so hideous – humans packed like abattoir carcasses, and systematic torture, that you could be forgiven for suspecting truth has been embroidered. Except for one fact. Meticulous records of every victim were kept. Each non-person, each beating, each flaying of skin, each removal of fingernails, chemical and electrical abuses, rape. Precise details of prisoners chained to iron bars to sleep, crammed together top-to-toe, living sharing a sardine-row with the dead.

    Rithy Panh's master stroke brings together S.21 survivors (two of the existing three) and former guards and torturers. He encourages them to talk. To find answers. One of the hardest things, even now, is these perpetrators see themselves also as victims. They joined Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge for what seemed like all the right reasons. Once inducted, they were brainwashed, indoctrinated and trapped. Deviation meant the same fate as those they flayed alive. Most were youths at the time, easily manipulated. But, how can you forgive and move on, when no-one will admit wrong-doing? Even Pol Pot blamed the people he left in charge.

    Men joined the Khmer Rouge because their villages were being repeatedly bombed. With their government's approval. The much loved Prince Sihanouk had been ousted in a coup. Lon Nol, an ineffective, U.S.-backed ruler, was forcibly installed in his place. Lon Nol gave America (under Johnson and Nixon) 'permission' for what became the largest bombing campaign in human history. Two and three-quarter million tons of bombs – the revised figure released by the Clinton administration – was more than the total dropped by all the allies in the whole of World War Two (which only came to two million, even including Hiroshima and Nagasaki). Whole areas of the country became pock-marked, aerial chemical deforestation destroyed livelihoods and created famine and disease. Thousands killed, many more permanently displaced. The Khmer Rouge leaders kept their extreme agenda – a form of rural, back-to-basics communism – completely secret until they were installed in power. Then the purges started. Lon Nol supporters were followed to the grave by academics or anyone tainted with 'western' ideas. Anyone opposing Pol Pot, or whose name was elicited under extreme torture. The population was turned out of the cities, dying of starvation. With no-one else to purge, the despots found traitors to execute its own members.

    Kampuchea's leading doctor, Swiss born Beat Richner, adamantly told me that without American intervention – which had been aimed ironically at stopping communism in the region – there would have been no Khmer Rouge. No Pol Pot victory. Richner worked in Kampuchea before, during and after Pol Pot, and his coal-face assessment agrees with most historians. But it is controversial: the U.S. military claim that Pol Pot would have won anyway. Ordinary Cambodians are still grieving rather than blaming. Rithy Panh's film exposes horror without finger-pointing. There are no 'lessons to be learnt.' Millions died – estimates say around a third of the population, two to three million. (And this in a country smaller than Great Britain. As a benchmark comparison, Hitler exterminated six million Jews .) While Panh documents the existence of atrocities, he does little to substantiate the bigger picture, which has to be gleaned elsewhere or from casual remarks of the former guards.

    Rithy Panh's film, S.21 – The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine, has no real ax to grind – in the tradition of best documentary, it simply tries to provide a window. While it is powerful evidence, many viewers might find it emotionally less satisfying than more box-office friendly film by Roland Joffé, The Killing Fields, which (symbolically) suggests the West's responsibility by the journalist who 'uses' his Cambodian friend for his own ends, and also has more of a story. Either way, it is a country that makes me ashamed to be a Westerner. Yet Cambodians have more to worry about than my sense of emotional well-being. Avoiding hunger, or the thousands of landmines that still litter their country. In Joffe's film, an American journalist travels to a Red Cross camp to be reunited with a Cambodian colleague he deserted to his fate. "Do you forgive me?" he asks. The Cambodian answers with a smile, "Nothing to forgive, Sydney, nothing to forgive." Although it won many awards, Panh's movie is rarely shown outside of Cambodia. There you can pick it up for about $3. From one of the many maimed or desperate hawkers that haunt the road outside Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum. This place formerly known as Security Prison 21, or 'S.21' for short, still has living ghosts. The film just tells us where they came from.
    5rlis2706

    Marginal Documentary

    I saw this film on the opening night of the Toronto International Film Festival. What starts out as an interesting and powerful documentary about the Khymer Rouge and the horrible events that unfolded in Cambodia quickly turns into a documentary of testimonials. The testimonials are initially powerful and moving, as both former prisoners and guards are able to confront each other about the events in the past. However, after the first few subjects give their stories, there is a sense of repetitiveness that echoes more and more with each following testimonial. It probably would have helped if there were some more historical information provided about Cambodia and how the Khymer Rouge came about. Overall, S21 covers an interesting subject, but it did not flow very well.

    इस तरह के और

    L'image manquante
    7.3
    L'image manquante
    Duch, le maître des forges de l'enfer
    7.2
    Duch, le maître des forges de l'enfer
    First They Killed My Father
    7.2
    First They Killed My Father
    किलिंग फील्ड्स
    7.8
    किलिंग फील्ड्स
    Enemies of the People
    7.7
    Enemies of the People
    Vincent doit mourir
    6.4
    Vincent doit mourir
    Grand Tour
    6.5
    Grand Tour
    Year Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia
    8.3
    Year Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia
    Hunger
    7.5
    Hunger
    Rendez-vous avec Pol Pot
    6.4
    Rendez-vous avec Pol Pot
    A Prophet
    7.8
    A Prophet
    Cambodia, Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge
    7.7
    Cambodia, Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge

    कहानी

    बदलाव करें

    क्या आपको पता है

    बदलाव करें
    • कनेक्शन
      Edited into Rendez-vous avec Pol Pot (2024)

    टॉप पसंद

    रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
    साइन इन करें

    अक्सर पूछे जाने वाला सवाल18

    • How long is S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine?Alexa द्वारा संचालित

    विवरण

    बदलाव करें
    • रिलीज़ की तारीख़
      • 11 फ़रवरी 2004 (फ़्रांस)
    • कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
      • कंबोडिया
      • फ़्रांस
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    • इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
      • S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine
    • फ़िल्माने की जगहें
      • Choeung Ek Killing Fields, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
    • उत्पादन कंपनियां
      • Arte France Cinéma
      • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
      • Ceská Televize
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    By what name was S21, la machine de mort khmère rouge (2003) officially released in India in English?
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