Down with BUSH!
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"Residue," which was largely shot at a pre-renovation historic home in Fort
Conde Village and in other Mobile locations, was directed by Nuon from a script
written by Davis and Nuon.
Miller, producer of the film, described the story it tells as "controversial
and intriguing" as it deals with the CIA's involvement in Cambodia and then
picks up six years later for "the chilling aftermath."
"Residue" is fiction based on history, Miller said. Providing backdrops for the
story are the Lon Nol coup d'etat of 1970 and the rule of the Khmer Rouge in
1976.
"We are shedding some light on a part of history that is not taught much,
especially in the United States," Miller told the Press-Register.
When the film begins, the war in Vietnam has begun to spread across that
country's border with neutral Cambodia. Fearing the spread of communism, Miller
explained, the CIA targeted Cambodia for clandestine operations.
The story focuses on a group of 12 secret army Cambodian soldiers trained by
the CIA to take out Vietnamese targets inside Cambodia in order to make way for
a new pro-American government.
But once the coup is successfully executed, one by one each member of this
secret team is killed.
Partway through the film, the scene shifts forward six years, with the Khmer
Rouge in power and thousands of people dying daily. One young man escapes
capture and sets out on his own personal war against those he feels are
responsible for what is happening in his country.
"When your country is in peril, what would you do?" asks screenwriter Davis in
a media release supporting the film. "How far would you take it? Sometimes you
have to do what is best for your country. Sometimes people do terrible,
horrific things like fight wars, and take human lives, not because they are
necessarily evil people, but because they believe with all their conviction and
soul that they are doing the right thing for their families, themselves and for
their country."
Director Nuon said the two time periods depicted in "Residue" were "crucial
years" when Cambodians hoped and strove for peace only to find their country
engulfed in civil war and then genocide.
The director made reference to The Killing Fields, a collective name for a
number of sites in Cambodia where large numbers of people were killed and
buried by the Khmer Rouge regime during its rule of the country from 1975 to
1979.
Nuon said that in the film "the Khmer genocide is like a character in itself,
always present, and always looming over the characters haunting them every step
of the way."
Miller said that while "Residue" was shortened to meet the submission criteria
of the festivals, those who attend the screening in Mobile Sunday may be
treated to a longer, 23-minute cut. It is possible, too, that the film will be
shown more than once at The Wine Loft on Sunday to accommodate whatever size
crowd turns out, the producer said..
"We took some behind-the-scenes footage and pictures," he said. "We'll be
showing that, too."
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