Most Popular Dai Sil Kim-Gibson Trailers
Total trailers found: 8
America Becoming Trailer (1991)
01 January 1991
Looks at the United States as it becomes an increasingly diverse nation. Tracing the history of significant changes in the Immigration and Nationality Act beginning in 1965, this program introduces a dramatic vision of a multi-cultural America where people of color are the new majority.
Silence Broken: Korean Comfort Women Trailer (2000)
01 April 2000
A powerful and emotional documentary about Korean women forced into sexual servitude by the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II, Silence Broken dramatically combines the testimony of former comfort women who demand justice for the "crimes against humanity" committed against them, along with contravening interviews of Japanese soldiers, recruiters and contemporary scholars who deny the existence of comfort women or claim that these victims "did this for money.
Motherland: Cuba, Korea, USA Trailer (2006)
01 January 2006
How do we decide where is home? Feeling increasingly isolated in her adopted homeland, accomplished documentarian Dai Sil Kim-Gibson travels to Cuba to unearth stories from a relatively unknown group in the Asian diaspora.
Sa-I-Gu Trailer (1993)
10 September 1993
Sa-I-Gu, literally translated in Korean as April 29, is the day of the 1992 Los Angeles riots or uprising.
Wet Sand: Voices from L.A. Trailer (2004)
01 January 2004
Filmmaker Dai Sil Kim-Gibson explores the aftermath of the 1992 LA Civil Unrest in her film WET SAND.
People are the Sky Trailer (2014)
01 January 2014
A naturalized American citizen born in North Korea, this filmmaker interweaves two themes: search for home and ordinary people, while exploring how North Korea has reached the current state.
Olivia's Story Trailer (2000)
17 February 2000
A Little League baseball game becomes the unlikely context for this lyrical drama about memory and loss, told from the perspective of a Korean-American woman and her grandmother.
A Forgotten People: The Sakhalin Koreans Trailer (1995)
01 January 1995
A documentary presentation of the lives of 43,000 Koreans brought by the Japanese to Sakhalin for forced labor and abandoned there for 50 years.