
Thai, documentary, 1994
English, Khmer, Thai & French
(Thai & English subs)
“This cool, clear documentary [presents] a different view on the Cambodian tragedy than we usually see in the West… The film tries to avoid simple ethical judgements and is considerably more alarming than what is shown about Cambodia on television.”
– Rotterdam International Film Festival programme
.
“Even more outstanding is Casino Cambodia, directed by the local ‘barefoot’ filmmaker IngK… Thefilm highlights the tragicomic and borders on the absurd.”
– The Nation (Bangkok)
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“Casino Cambodia resists easy moral judgements and is certainly more troubling than anything you will see on the TV news. Perhaps the most startling encounter is with Dr Haing Ngor, actor-hero of The Killing Fields. Ing knew him years ago in the refugee camps. Now she finds him deforesting his homeland with alogging operation…”
– Chris Berry, Department of Cinema Studies,
LaTrobe University, Melbourne.
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“Surprisingly, recreation also has a role in ‘Casino Cambodia’, which casts an amused but sympathetic eye at the war-ravaged country’s efforts to build a tourist trade. It is narrator Ing K’s thesis that the news media have ‘sensationalized’ and ‘oversimplified’ Cambodia, and her ironic, impressionistic approach is suited to raising provocative questions rather than providing solid answers.”
– John Anderson, Newsday (New York)
.
“Casino Cambodia reassesses conventional opinions about the recent return of relative peace there. The UN presence…and the wave of entrepreneurs that came with it, are shown to have resulted in an international playground (or casino) as much as an exercise in nation-building… Simplistic perspectives in the media are not so easily excused, and the film looks at how the complexity of the Khmer Rouge’s origin has largely been left out of recent coverage.”
– Manager Magazine (Bangkok)