Bophana: A Cambodian Tragedy

Bophana: A Cambodian Tragedy
Directed by Rithy Panh
Cinematography Jacques Pamart
Edited by Marie-Christine Rougerie
Distributed by Catherine Dussart Productions
Institut national de l'audiovisuel
France 3
Release dates
1996
Running time
60 minutes
Country Cambodia/France

Bophana: A Cambodian Tragedy, or Bophana, une tragédie cambodgienne, is a 1996 French-Cambodian made-for-television docudrama directed by Rithy Panh.

Synopsis

Based upon documentation of forced confessions made during the Khmer Rouge era in Cambodia, and recovered during the 1980s, Bophana: A Cambodian Tragedy reconstructs the relationship of a young woman, Hout Bophana, and Ly Sitha, a former Buddhist monk turned Khmer Rouge cadre.

Bophana and Sitha met before the fall of Phnom Penh. Sitha, disgusted by the corruption of the Lon Nol regime, joined the Communist Khmer Rouge resistance, and the couple was separated. After Phnom Penh's residents were forced to leave by the Khmer Rouge, Bophana and Sitha were reunited, only to both be caught up in the genocidal regime's purges, in which they were arrested and taken to S21 prison, where they were tortured and forced to make confessions before they were both executed in 1976.

Bophana, the Audiovisual Resource Center - Cambodia

Bophana is the namesake of the Bophana Center, located in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, which was co-founded by director Rithy Panh to collect and preserve Cambodia's audiovisual heritage.

The name Bophana means "flower" in the Khmer language.

External links

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