Inicio Películas No Vietnamese Ever Called Me Nigger
No Vietnamese Ever Called Me Nigger
(No Vietnamese Ever Called Me Nigger, 1968)
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Ficha
Director
David Loeb Weiss
Año
1968
País
Estados Unidos
Duración
68
Idioma
English

Synopsis

The film intertwines a conversation among three black Vietnam veterans: Dalton James, Preston Lay Jr. and Akmed Lorence, with scenes of the mobilization of April, 1967 to end a war conflict—a national event which occurred just one week after Martin Luther King’s speech Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence.

 

Biography

David Loeb Weiss was a film director whose works received different acknowledgements. His filmography includes Farewell, Etaoin Shrdlu; Profile of a Peace Paradeand No Vietnamese Ever Called Me Nigger.

*Preserved through a collaboration between Anthology Film Archives and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, supported by the Robert F. Smith Fund. Special thanks to Cinema Guild, John Binder,John Klacsmann (Anthology), Walter Forsberg (NMAAHC), and Chris Hughes & Laura Major (Colorlab). A Cinema Guild release.

 

Producción
Fotografía
Michael Wadleigh
Edición
John Binder
Producción
David Loeb Weiss
Producción Ejecutiva
John Binder, Michael Wadleigh
Compañía productora
Paradigm Films