Festival to Feature Films by O'seas Koreans
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The first Korean Network Film Festival, which will feature works by ethnic Koreans overseas, will open Friday for a two-day run in Seoul.
The 12 films from six nations slated for screening include "That's How We Have Lived", the story of a former sex slave for the Japanese imperial army.
Bae Yeon-seok's "Do U Cry for Me, Argentina?" tells the experience of 1.5 Korean-Argentineans in the South American country.
"45 Percent Korean" is director Natalie Cho Mi-hui's chronicle of life as a Korean adoptee in Belgium.
Busan and Gwangju will host similar festivals in March.
Reported by KBS World Radio
The 12 films from six nations slated for screening include "That's How We Have Lived", the story of a former sex slave for the Japanese imperial army.
Bae Yeon-seok's "Do U Cry for Me, Argentina?" tells the experience of 1.5 Korean-Argentineans in the South American country.
"45 Percent Korean" is director Natalie Cho Mi-hui's chronicle of life as a Korean adoptee in Belgium.
Busan and Gwangju will host similar festivals in March.
Reported by KBS World Radio
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