A documentary about the 8-day sit-in struggle by GANG Cheolmin, a 22 year-old private in the South Korean army who declared his objection to military service on November 21, 2003 in order to stop the South Korean government from sending troops to Iraq, and the peace groups supporting him.

"You belong to the country for the next two years." The film describes Woo-cheol's struggles with be...

Ko Eun-young, a thirty, non-naitive Jeju Island woman with no experience in politics, runs for Jeju ...
Korea is a divided nation. Filmmaker Min Sook Lee sets out on a revelatory, emotion-charged journey ...

Recording Nguyen Thi Thanh, the only survivor of Phong Nhi Phong Nhat massacre, where civilians were...

North Korea has nuclear weapons. How did it manage to get them quietly? Donald Trump is under the im...

Obsessively referring to the traumas and wounds that the Spanish civil war (1936-39) and Franco's di...

The Grand Canal project was one of the key pledges of the former President Lee. He first said that h...

CHARBON depicts how Europe was built on fossil fuels over the past 100 years. And how it was torn ap...

An Iraqi journalist joins an army of uneasy allies and unforgettable characters in the epic battle t...

According to a survey by the U.S. military government in 1946, 78% of the South Korean people wanted...

Portrait of Mrs. B., a tough charismatic North Korean woman who smuggles between North Korea, China ...

Joel Hunt served as a combat engineer from 1998-2007, with multiple tours in Iraq. While there, he e...

Scott Castle served in the U.S. Marine Corps for four years. While assigned to 1st Battalion, 5th Ma...

A former U.S. Air Force air tanker navigator, Lt. Col. Ken Murray’s career takes us from the horrifi...

In 2008, late President Roh Moo-hyun returned to his hometown Bongha village after his retirement an...

Three incredible stories of women who risked everything to tell the truth. Their stories became worl...