Aftermath: The Remnants of War explained

Aftermath: The Remnants of War
Director:Daniel Sekulich
Producer:Ed Barreveld
Michael Kot
Peter Starr
Narrator:John Jarvis
Cinematography:Michael Grippo
Editing:Deborah Palloway
Studio:National Film Board of Canada
Runtime:73 min
Country:Canada
Language:English

Aftermath: The Remnants of War is a 2001 Canadian documentary film about the painful legacy of war directed by Daniel Sekulich. Based on the Lionel Gelber Prize winning book of the same name by Donovan Webster, it is co-written by Sekulich and Allen Abel, and co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada and Aftermath Pictures.

Based on the award-winning book by Donovan Webster, this film exposes the human remains, environmental damage, and psychological trauma of military conflict which remain after the fighting stops and the troops go home. The program features interviews with individuals involved with the reparation of the residual devastation - people who destroy unexploded munitions at Verdun and in Sarajevo, recover and identify skeletons of battlefield casualties at Stalingrad, and help victims of Agent Orange in the Aluoi Valley, Vietnam. Archival footage sets each segment in its historical context.

Filmed on location in Russia, France, Bosnia and Vietnam, the documentary features personal accounts of individuals involved in the cleanup of war: from de-miners, psychologists working with distraught soldiers, a treasure hunter turned archeologist in Stalingrad, and scientists and doctors struggling with the contamination of dioxin used in the Vietnam War.

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Aftermath: The Remnants of War. Film Collection. National Film Board of Canada Web site. 2009-09-02.