The Christians of North Gando lose their country and leave their hometown, but gain the Gospel. The cross they hold in their hands is the symbol of daring for independence and a royal summon of the generation they have to endure. Historian Sim Yo Han retraces the footsteps of the late Father Moon Dong Hwan and finds meanings of the anti-Japanese independence movement hidden in various parts of North Gando.
They're called bar women, hostesses, or sex workers and "western princesses." They come from poor fa...
The film deals with the rights of Japanese-Koreans -born in Japan but without Japanese passport or n...
A film that explores the lives of female independence activists who fought against the Japanese Occu...
Constitutionally precluded from claiming any right to self-determination, the Catalans stick to thei...
A relentless chronicle of the tragedy of the Uighurs, an ethnic minority of some eleven million peop...
When the MV Sewol ferry sank off the coast of South Korea in 2014, over three hundred people lost th...
Festival panafricain d'Alger is a documentary by William Klein of the music and dance festival held ...
Punk bands in Korea get invited to biggest hardcore punk festival in Tokyo. This movie shows how one...
During the Japanese colonial period, 22 Korean female workers were forced to work in a spinning mill...
In 1992, KIM Bok-dong, reported herself as a victim of the sexual slavery, "comfort women" during Wo...
Documentary made by the Spanish political party VOX about the Catalan referendum of 2017 from the po...
The Silence narrates the struggle of fifteen "comfort women"—former sex slaves by the Imperial Japan...
There lives a couple known as "100-year-old lovebirds". They're like fairy tale characters: the husb...
The small county of Seongju staged protests against the THAAD. Young mothers led protests from conce...
The year of 1988 in Estonia was exceptional - it came as a surprise for everyone that all of a sudde...
Numerous people are on subway trains running up and down the city center endlessly. There are people...