Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Finding Face [to be screened in Los Angeles and San Francisco

Mon., Jul. 4, 2011
By Robert Koehler
Variety (USA)

Powered By A Spin Film presentation. Produced by Skye Fitzgerald, Patti Duncan. Directed by Skye Fitzgerald, Patti Duncan. Written by Duncan.

With: Tat Marina, Sequndo Tat, Srey Pou, Mu Sochua, Jason Barber, Mary Jo Baryza, Christy Kiernan, Daniel Driscoll, Chour Sreya. (English, Cambodian dialogue)

The troubling case of the grossly disfiguring acid attack on Cambodian karaoke star Tat Marina receives emotional and artful treatment in filmmaking team Skye Fitzgerald and Patti Duncan's "Finding Face." Inexplicably overlooked by major doc-leaning festivals, pic deserves considerable exposure for the impact of its story and an acute sense of injustice that goes beyond the usual document of human-rights violations. Pic has been floundering in minor fests, but wider broadcast on tube seems likely.

In 1999, 14-year-old Marina was stalked by Cambodia's Undersecretary of State Svay Sitha, who lied to her about his true identity. When the truth emerged, Marina was kidnapped (according to sister Srey Pou) by Sitha, whose enraged wife, Khoun Sophal, arranged an acid attack on the girl. Docu tracks her recovery and surgeries in the U.S. and her brother Sequndo's efforts to seek justice, but the David-vs.-Goliath nature of the case has ensured that no arrests have occurred a decade since. Pic's level of outrage over an international wave of acid attacks is hard to overstate.

Camera (color, DV), Fitzgerald; editor, Patrick Weishampel; music, William Campbell, Dengue Fever, Marketa Irglova. Reviewed on DVD, Los Angeles, June 2, 2011. (In Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival, San Francisco Documentary Festival.) Running time: 67 MIN.

Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hopefully one day this movie and others of the same kind about injustice in Cambodia will be available for sale on DVDs.

I certainly want to watch them.

Anet Khmer

Anonymous said...

What had happened to Tat Marina's face is a good lesson for a bad girl who has affairs with another woman's husband. Actually, Khmer tradition has never valued for girl who loves another girl's husband at all, but Tat Marina's story has been politicized by opposition against the government. Tat Marina is not the first girl who was acid attacked and she will not the last person either.